Listen to this article
Narrated by Dr. Jana Rundle• 8.6 MB
Keyboard shortcuts: Space or K to play/pause • ← → to seek ±5s
The Role of Hormones in Postpartum Anxiety
You gave birth three weeks ago, and your body feels like it's betraying you.
Your heart races for no reason. You wake up at 3 AM drenched in sweat, heart pounding, convinced something terrible is about to happen.
You check the baby monitor obsessively. You can't eat. You can't sit still. Your hands shake. Your mind spirals with worst-case scenarios you can't shut off.
Everyone says it's normal to worry about your new baby. But this doesn't feel like normal worry—this feels like terror. It feels physical. It feels out of control.
You're wondering: Is this just anxiety, or is something wrong with my body?
Here's the truth: It's both. Postpartum anxiety (PPA) isn't "all in your head." It's significantly driven by the hormonal earthquake your body just experienced.
Understanding this doesn't minimize your suffering—it explains it, validates it, and points toward effective treatment.
The Postpartum Hormonal Crash: What Just Happened to Your Body
During pregnancy, your body becomes a hormone factory producing levels 10-100 times higher than normal. Then, within 24-48 hours after birth, those hormones plummet.
"This is the steepest, fastest hormonal drop your body will ever experience. It's more dramatic than puberty, menopause, or any other hormonal transition."
And it has profound effects on your brain and nervous system. 🧠
The Key Players
Estrogen:
During pregnancy: Increases 100-fold, stabilizes mood, promotes growth of baby and placenta
After birth: Drops to near-zero within 24 hours
Effect on anxiety: Low estrogen is linked to anxiety, panic attacks, mood instability
Progesterone:
During pregnancy: Increases 10-15 fold, has calming, sedative effect on brain
After birth: Crashes within hours
Effect on anxiety: Sudden loss of progesterone's calming effect leaves you vulnerable to anxiety and insomnia
Oxytocin:
During labor and breastfeeding: Surges (the "bonding hormone")
Between feedings: Drops
Effect on anxiety: Fluctuations can contribute to anxiety and hypervigilance about baby's safety
Cortisol (Stress Hormone):
During pregnancy: Elevated (normal for pregnancy)
After birth: Often remains elevated or becomes dysregulated
Effect on anxiety: High cortisol = heightened stress response, panic, hyperarousal
Thyroid Hormones:
After birth: Up to 10% of women develop postpartum thyroiditis (thyroid dysfunction)
Effect on anxiety: Hyperthyroidism (overactive thyroid) can mimic or worsen anxiety symptoms
What This Feels Like in Your Body
These hormonal shifts aren't abstract—they create physical sensations you feel every day:
✓ Racing heart and palpitations (cortisol, thyroid)
✓ Shakiness and trembling (cortisol, adrenaline)
✓ Hot flashes and night sweats (estrogen withdrawal)
✓ Insomnia even when exhausted (progesterone loss, cortisol)
✓ Loss of appetite or nausea (cortisol, thyroid)
✓ Dizziness or lightheadedness (hormonal changes affecting blood pressure)
✓ Chest tightness or difficulty breathing (anxiety + hormonal effects)
You're not imagining these sensations. They're real physical manifestations of hormonal chaos.
How Hormones Directly Cause Anxiety Symptoms
Let's break down the biological mechanisms:
1. Estrogen and Serotonin: The Mood Connection
What estrogen does:
Estrogen regulates serotonin (the "feel-good" neurotransmitter) in several ways:
Increases serotonin production
Increases sensitivity of serotonin receptors
Decreases breakdown of serotonin (keeps it around longer)
When estrogen crashes:
Serotonin levels plummet
Serotonin receptors become less sensitive
Result: Anxiety, panic, irritability, mood swings
This is why:
You might have felt emotionally stable during pregnancy (high estrogen = high serotonin)
Then felt anxious within days of giving birth (crashed estrogen = crashed serotonin)
2. Progesterone and GABA: The Calming System
What progesterone does:
Progesterone metabolizes into allopregnanolone, which activates GABA receptors in the brain.
What's GABA?
GABA (gamma-aminobutyric acid) is your brain's main calming neurotransmitter. It:
Reduces neuronal excitability
Promotes relaxation
Induces sleep
Counteracts anxiety
Think of GABA like your brain's brake pedal. Progesterone keeps that brake working. 🧘♀️
When progesterone crashes:
GABA activity decreases
Your brain loses its natural brake system
Result: Racing thoughts, insomnia, panic, hyperarousal
This is why:
You might have slept like a rock during pregnancy (high progesterone = strong GABA = sedation)
Then couldn't sleep postpartum even when the baby finally sleeps (no progesterone = weak GABA = wired)
3. Cortisol: The Stress Response Gone Haywire
What cortisol does:
Cortisol is your stress hormone. In normal amounts, it helps you wake up, respond to threats, and stay alert.
What happens postpartum:
Cortisol often remains elevated from the stress of childbirth
Sleep deprivation keeps cortisol high
Anxiety itself triggers more cortisol release
Creates a vicious cycle
High cortisol causes:
Constant sense of danger or urgency
Hypervigilance (always scanning for threats)
Racing heart, sweating, shakiness
Difficulty relaxing or winding down
Feeling "on edge" constantly
This is why:
You feel like you're in constant fight-or-flight mode
Your body reacts to minor stresses as if they're emergencies
You can't "turn off" even when you're safe
4. Oxytocin: The Bonding Paradox
What oxytocin does:
Promotes bonding and attachment to baby
Induces calm and trust
Releases during breastfeeding and skin-to-skin contact
The paradox:
Oxytocin is supposed to be calming, so why does it contribute to anxiety?
Answer: Oxytocin makes you hyper-focused on your baby's safety. In the right amount, this is protective. In excess, it becomes hypervigilance and obsessive worry.
This is why:
You check the baby's breathing 50 times a night
You can't relax when someone else holds the baby
You catastrophize about every tiny thing that could go wrong
5. Thyroid Dysfunction: The Hidden Culprit
What is postpartum thyroiditis?
Up to 10% of women develop temporary thyroid dysfunction after giving birth.
Two phases:
Phase 1: Hyperthyroidism (overactive thyroid, 1-4 months postpartum)
Symptoms:
Anxiety and nervousness
Racing heart, palpitations
Trembling hands
Weight loss despite eating
Insomnia
Feeling "wired"
These symptoms are IDENTICAL to anxiety disorder. Many women with postpartum thyroiditis are misdiagnosed with anxiety when it's actually thyroid.
Phase 2: Hypothyroidism (underactive thyroid, 4-8 months postpartum)
Symptoms:
Fatigue, exhaustion
Depression
Weight gain
Brain fog
Hair loss
This is why thyroid testing is critical for any postpartum anxiety. 🩺
Hormone vs. Anxiety Symptoms: How to Tell the Difference?
The short answer: You often can't, without testing.
Postpartum anxiety and hormonal imbalances cause overlapping symptoms. Here's a guide:
Symptoms More Likely Hormonal
Sudden onset within days/weeks of birth (suggests hormonal crash)
Physical symptoms dominate (heart racing, sweating, trembling) more than mental worry
Cyclical patterns (worse at certain times of day, around menstrual cycle if it's returned)
Accompanied by other hormonal signs: Night sweats, hot flashes, irregular periods, hair loss, weight changes
No prior history of anxiety disorder (suggests biological trigger, not pre-existing condition)
Symptoms More Likely Primary Anxiety Disorder
Mental symptoms dominate: Obsessive worry, catastrophic thinking, intrusive thoughts
Gradual onset over weeks (rather than sudden crash)
Triggered by specific fears (baby's safety, SIDS, contamination)
History of anxiety before pregnancy (suggests pre-existing vulnerability)
Responds primarily to psychological interventions (therapy, coping strategies)
"But here's the key: It's rarely one OR the other. It's usually BOTH. Hormones set the stage (biological vulnerability), and anxiety symptoms develop on that foundation."
Testing: Should You Check Your Hormones?
Short answer: Yes, especially thyroid.
Recommended Tests for Postpartum Anxiety
1. Thyroid Panel (ESSENTIAL)
TSH (thyroid stimulating hormone)
Free T4
Free T3
TPO antibodies (checks for autoimmune thyroiditis)
When to test: If you have anxiety symptoms, test thyroid ASAP. Postpartum thyroiditis is common and treatable.
What's normal postpartum: TSH should be 0.5-2.5. Many doctors accept up to 4.5, but optimal is lower, especially for mood.
2. Complete Blood Count (CBC)
Checks for anemia (low iron)
Anemia causes fatigue, dizziness, rapid heart rate—can worsen anxiety
3. Comprehensive Metabolic Panel
Checks electrolytes, kidney function, blood sugar
Imbalances can cause anxiety-like symptoms
4. Vitamin D
Low vitamin D linked to anxiety and depression
Very common postpartum
5. Ferritin (Iron Stores)
Even if you're not anemic, low ferritin causes fatigue, brain fog, and can worsen mood
Hormone Tests That Are Less Useful
Estrogen and Progesterone Levels:
Levels fluctuate throughout the day and menstrual cycle
A single snapshot isn't very informative
More useful: Tracking patterns over time with symptom diary
Cortisol:
Difficult to interpret (fluctuates with stress, time of day)
Salivary cortisol curve (multiple samples over day) is more informative but not widely available
Usually tested if suspected Cushing's syndrome or adrenal insufficiency (rare)
What to Do With Results
If thyroid is abnormal:
Hyperthyroid (overactive): Usually monitored without treatment if mild; beta-blockers for symptom relief if needed; resolves in most women within months
Hypothyroid (underactive): Treated with levothyroxine (safe while breastfeeding); often temporary but may need long-term treatment
If anemia or vitamin deficiency:
Iron supplementation (take with vitamin C for absorption)
Vitamin D supplementation
B12 if deficient
If everything is normal:
Doesn't mean your anxiety isn't real
Means it's not caused by measurable deficiency
Proceed with mental health treatment (therapy, medication if needed)
Treatment: How to Address Hormonal Anxiety
The good news: Understanding the hormonal component opens up more treatment options. ❤️
1. Therapy (Still Essential)
Even if hormones are contributing, therapy teaches your brain to respond differently to the anxiety signals your body is sending.
Best approaches:
Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy (CBT): Challenges catastrophic thoughts, teaches coping skills
Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT): Helps you accept physical sensations without fighting them
Somatic therapy: Addresses the body-based experience of anxiety
2. Medication
SSRIs (Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors):
Examples: Sertraline (Zoloft), escitalopram (Lexapro)
How they help: Increase serotonin (which crashed with estrogen)
Safe while breastfeeding
Take 4-6 weeks to work fully
SNRIs (Serotonin-Norepinephrine Reuptake Inhibitors):
Example: Venlafaxine (Effexor)
Helps with both anxiety and physical symptoms
Benzodiazepines (Short-Term):
Examples: Lorazepam (Ativan), clonazepam (Klonopin)
How they help: Directly activate GABA receptors (mimicking lost progesterone effect)
Used short-term for acute panic or severe insomnia
Avoid long-term use (dependence risk)
Beta-Blockers:
Example: Propranolol
How they help: Block physical symptoms (racing heart, trembling)
Helpful for panic attacks, performance anxiety
Safe while breastfeeding
Thyroid Medication (if indicated):
Levothyroxine for hypothyroidism
Addresses hormonal root cause directly
3. Lifestyle Strategies That Support Hormonal Balance
Sleep (Yes, Even Though It's Hard):
Sleep deprivation worsens cortisol dysregulation
Take shifts with partner if possible
Even one 4-hour stretch helps
Nutrition:
Protein stabilizes blood sugar and supports neurotransmitter production
Omega-3 fatty acids (fish, walnuts, flaxseed) support brain health
Limit caffeine (can worsen anxiety and cortisol spikes)
Movement:
Gentle exercise (walking, yoga) helps regulate cortisol
Don't overdo it (intense exercise can spike cortisol if you're already stressed)
Stress Reduction:
Breathing exercises activate parasympathetic nervous system (counteracts cortisol)
Mindfulness reduces stress reactivity
Lower stress = better hormonal regulation
4. Supplements (With Doctor Approval)
Omega-3 Fatty Acids:
Dosage: 1,000-2,000 mg EPA+DHA daily
Evidence: Moderate support for reducing anxiety and depression
Vitamin D:
Dosage: 1,000-4,000 IU daily (depending on deficiency)
Evidence: Low D linked to mood disorders
Magnesium:
Dosage: 200-400 mg daily
Evidence: May help with anxiety and sleep (acts on GABA receptors like progesterone)
Safe while breastfeeding
Inositol:
Dosage: 12-18 grams daily
Evidence: Some support for anxiety and OCD
Generally safe but high doses can cause GI upset
L-Theanine:
Dosage: 200-400 mg daily
Evidence: Promotes relaxation without sedation
Found in green tea
Always discuss with your doctor before starting supplements, especially while breastfeeding.
5. Controversial/Emerging Treatments
Progesterone Supplementation:
Theory: Replacing crashed progesterone should help
Reality: Limited evidence, mixed results
May help some women, but not FDA-approved for PPA
Discuss with reproductive psychiatrist if interested
Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT):
Sometimes used for severe symptoms in non-breastfeeding women
Estrogen patches or pills can help stabilize mood
Not standard treatment for PPA
Requires specialist (reproductive endocrinologist or psychiatrist)
Allopregnanolone (Brexanolone/Zulresso):
IV infusion over 60 hours
FDA-approved for postpartum depression (not specifically anxiety)
Directly replaces lost progesterone metabolite
Expensive, requires hospital stay
Not widely available but emerging option
When Hormones Settle: What to Expect
Timeline for hormonal stabilization:
Immediate postpartum (0-2 weeks): Steepest crash, most chaotic
2-6 weeks: Hormones begin stabilizing but still fluctuating
3-6 months: More stable, especially if not breastfeeding
Breastfeeding: Hormones remain different from baseline until weaning (lower estrogen, higher prolactin)
After weaning: Hormones return to pre-pregnancy baseline within 1-3 months
What this means for your anxiety:
If anxiety is PRIMARILY hormonal:
May improve as hormones stabilize (3-6 months postpartum)
May improve after weaning from breastfeeding
If anxiety has both hormonal and psychological components:
Physical symptoms may ease as hormones stabilize
Mental symptoms (worry, catastrophizing) may persist and need therapy
If anxiety developed on hormonal foundation but is now self-sustaining:
Even after hormones stabilize, anxiety may remain
This is why early treatment matters—don't wait it out
Breastfeeding and Hormones: The Anxiety Connection
Breastfeeding affects hormones in ways that can contribute to anxiety:
Low Estrogen:
Breastfeeding keeps estrogen low (prevents ovulation/menstruation)
Low estrogen = lower serotonin = vulnerability to anxiety
Prolactin:
High during breastfeeding
Can contribute to mood changes in some women
Oxytocin Fluctuations:
Surges during nursing
Drops between feedings
Fluctuations can feel destabilizing
This doesn't mean you should stop breastfeeding. But it does mean:
Be aware that breastfeeding affects your hormones and mood
It's okay to wean if it's worsening your mental health
Fed is best—your mental health matters more than feeding method
The Cycle: How Anxiety and Hormones Feed Each Other
Here's the vicious cycle:
Hormones crash → Serotonin and GABA drop → Anxiety symptoms start
Anxiety triggers stress response → Cortisol spikes
High cortisol worsens sleep → Sleep deprivation worsens hormone dysregulation
Poor sleep and stress → More anxiety
Anxiety about anxiety → Mental worry compounds physical symptoms
Cycle continues
Breaking the cycle:
Treat hormonal component (medication, supplements, lifestyle)
Treat psychological component (therapy, coping skills)
Address sleep deprivation (partner shifts, support)
Lower stress where possible (accept help, lower expectations)
A Word of Validation
If you've been dismissed with "It's just hormones, it'll pass" or "It's all in your head," let's be clear:
"Yes, hormones are a major factor in postpartum anxiety. But that doesn't mean you should just wait it out or that it's not serious."
Hormonal doesn't mean:
Not real
Not serious
Not treatable
Not worthy of medical intervention
"Just part of being a new mom"
Hormonal means:
There's a biological explanation
Your brain chemistry is dysregulated
You deserve treatment that addresses the root cause
This is a medical condition, not a character flaw
You can't just "think your way out" of a serotonin deficiency or a thyroid problem. You need actual intervention.
When to Seek Help
Seek help if:
Anxiety interferes with daily functioning (can't care for baby, can't eat/sleep)
Physical symptoms are severe or worsening (chest pain, persistent rapid heart rate)
You're having panic attacks multiple times a day
You're avoiding situations or people due to anxiety
You're having intrusive thoughts about harm
You're feeling hopeless or suicidal
Tests to request:
Thyroid panel (TSH, Free T4, Free T3, TPO antibodies)
CBC (anemia check)
Vitamin D and ferritin
Specialists to see:
Psychiatrist (preferably perinatal/reproductive psychiatrist for hormone-savvy care)
Therapist specializing in perinatal mental health
Endocrinologist (if thyroid issues confirmed)
OB/GYN (can order initial hormone tests)
Hope and Recovery
Here's what you need to know:
Postpartum anxiety—even when hormonally driven—is highly treatable
Most women see significant improvement within 6-12 weeks of starting treatment
As hormones stabilize, physical symptoms often ease
Therapy + medication (if needed) addresses both biological and psychological components
You won't feel like this forever
"Thousands of women have had the same hormonal crash you're experiencing. With the right treatment, they recovered. So can you." 🌿
Resources
Postpartum Support International
Helpline: 1-800-944-4773 (call or text)
Website: postpartum.net
Free support groups, provider directory, educational resources
National Maternal Mental Health Hotline
Call or text: 1-833-TLC-MAMA (1-833-852-6262)
24/7 support for maternal mental health
Postpartum Thyroid Information
American Thyroid Association: www.thyroid.org
Information on postpartum thyroiditis, testing, treatment
Hormone Testing Resources
Request thyroid panel from OB/GYN or primary care
Reproductive psychiatrists specialize in hormone-mood connections
Bloom Psychology
We specialize in postpartum anxiety with a biopsychosocial approach:
Comprehensive assessment including hormone screening
Evidence-based therapy (CBT, ACT, somatic approaches)
Coordination with medical providers for hormone testing/treatment
Psychiatry partner referrals for med management
Virtual therapy across Texas
In-person sessions in North Austin
Schedule a free 15-minute consultation: bloompsychologynorthaustin.com/book
Call us: 512-898-9510
We understand the hormonal foundations of postpartum anxiety and provide integrated care that addresses both your biology and your mental health. You don't have to choose between medical and psychological treatment—you deserve both.
Dr. Jana Rundle is a licensed clinical psychologist specializing in maternal mental health. She believes that understanding the hormonal roots of postpartum anxiety validates your experience and opens pathways to effective, comprehensive treatment. Your anxiety is real, it's biological, and it's treatable.
Get More Like This
Join hundreds of moms receiving monthly mental health insights, evidence-based tips, and new articles.
No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.

Dr. Jana Rundle
Clinical Psychologist, Founder of Bloom Psychology

