Mood swings, anxiety, and irritability often follow a hormonal pattern. Learn how to track mood alongside your hormones to find yours, and finally explain it to your doctor.

Mood swings, anxiety, and irritability often follow a hormonal pattern. Learn how to track mood alongside your hormones to find yours, and finally explain it to your doctor.
You already know that your mood and your hormones are connected. You feel it. The week before your period when everything feels harder than it should. The particular flatness that settles in after a night of hot flashes. The anxiety that arrives from nowhere and leaves just as suddenly, seemingly tied to nothing you can point to.
What most women haven't been given is a framework for turning that felt sense into actual data, the kind you can use to understand your own patterns, and that your doctor can actually work with.
That's what hormone mood tracking does. And it's considerably more powerful than a mood journal alone.
Why Mood Tracking Without Hormones Is Only Half the Picture
Mood journaling and symptom tracking apps have been around for years. The problem is that most of them record what you're feeling, anxious, irritable, low, foggy, without capturing the biological context that explains why.
A mood diary entry that says "felt really anxious and couldn't concentrate, day 22 of cycle" is useful. But add estradiol and progesterone data from that same day, dropping estradiol, low progesterone, and you've gone from a diary entry to a pattern. You've connected a symptom to a mechanism. That's a completely different conversation with your clinician than "I've been feeling off."
Hormones don't just influence mood in a general, fuzzy way. Specific hormones act on specific neurological systems, and their fluctuations produce predictable, traceable effects:
- Estrogen supports serotonin production and receptor sensitivity. When it drops, including the erratic drops characteristic of perimenopause, mood stability goes with it.
- Progesterone metabolizes into allopregnanolone, which activates GABA-A receptors, the brain's primary calming system. Low progesterone means a less effective braking mechanism on anxiety and reactivity.
- LH and FSH surges that signal ovulation shifts can also correspond with mood changes that women notice but rarely connect to a hormonal event.
- Cortisol dysregulation, which often develops alongside sex hormone changes, produces the wired-but-exhausted feeling, high afternoon cortisol when it should be dropping, or a flattened morning peak that leaves you unable to feel awake.
Tracking mood without tracking the hormones underneath it is like tracking your energy without tracking your sleep. You see the output but not the input.
What to Track (and How to Do It Without It Becoming a Part-Time Job)
The goal isn't to track everything. It's to track the right things consistently enough to see a pattern emerge, usually within 4 to 8 weeks.
The core data points
1. Hormone levels
For cycle-tracking purposes, estrogen (estradiol), LH, and progesterone are the key hormones to watch. At-home urine-based hormone testing, like the Oova kit, gives you daily, quantitative hormone readings rather than a single snapshot from a lab draw. This matters because hormone levels fluctuate significantly within a single day, let alone across a cycle.
For perimenopausal tracking specifically, the pattern over time is often more meaningful than any individual reading. What you're looking for: erratic estrogen peaks and troughs, a shortened or absent progesterone rise in the luteal phase, LH surges that are later, weaker, or harder to detect than they used to be.
2. Mood and emotional state
Keep it simple. Rate the following daily on a 1–5 scale:
- Overall mood (1 = very low, 5 = very good)
- Anxiety level (1 = none, 5 = severe)
- Irritability (1 = none, 5 = significant)
- Brain fog / concentration (1 = none, 5 = severe)
Simple numerical ratings are easier to maintain over weeks than written descriptions, and they're far easier to correlate with hormone data.
3. Sleep quality
This one is worth adding because the relationship is bidirectional. Poor sleep, especially from night sweats, causes mood disruption independent of hormone levels. Low hormones cause sleep disruption. Separating these effects helps you understand which is driving which on a given day. Note: hours slept, night wake-ups, and whether you woke from sweating.
4. Physical symptoms
Note hot flashes, spotting or bleeding changes, bloating, and headaches. These are often the most visible markers of hormonal fluctuation on a given day and help bridge the gap between your hormone numbers and how you felt.
5. Cycle day
If your periods are still regular, record your cycle day. If they're irregular, a hallmark of perimenopause, record the date instead and note when your period arrives retroactively. Irregular cycles are themselves data.
How to Read What You've Collected
After 4 to 8 weeks of consistent tracking, look for these patterns:
The pre-period crash
If anxiety, irritability, or low mood cluster in the 5–10 days before your period and resolve once bleeding starts, you're likely seeing the effect of dropping estrogen and progesterone in the late luteal phase. This is the hormonal signature of PMS mood symptoms, and in its more severe form, PMDD.
What to look for in your hormone data: estradiol declining after a mid-cycle peak, progesterone failing to rise adequately or dropping early in the luteal phase.
The perimenopausal wave
In perimenopause, the pattern becomes less predictable, but it doesn't disappear. You may see mood dips that correspond to erratic estrogen drops rather than a predictable luteal phase decline. Anxiety that arrives seemingly without a trigger but correlates, when you look back at your data, with a day when estrogen spiked then dropped sharply. Knowing that these episodes are hormonally driven rather than psychological is itself useful: it changes how you respond to them and what treatment options make sense.
The sleep-mood loop
If your mood ratings are consistently worse the day after a night with poor sleep quality or hot flashes, and better on nights when sleep is uninterrupted, you're seeing the cortisol and sleep-deprivation effect rather than a direct hormone-to-mood effect. This distinction matters because the interventions are different, addressing sleep becomes the priority rather than hormone stabilization alone.
The "normal bloodwork" paradox
One of the most validating things hormone mood tracking can show you is that your mood symptoms are real and hormonally correlated even on days when your levels look "normal." If you can show your clinician that your anxiety spikes predictably within 24–48 hours of an estrogen drop, even when both readings fall within reference ranges, you've made a clinical argument for pattern-based treatment rather than threshold-based treatment. That's a different conversation entirely.
How to Use Your Data with Your Doctor
This is where mood tracking earns its real return on investment.
Most clinical appointments are 15 minutes. You have time to say "I've been feeling anxious and moody" or you have time to say "I've been tracking my hormones and mood for eight weeks and I'm seeing that my anxiety spikes consistently on days when my estradiol drops sharply, usually around day 20 of my cycle. Here's the data."
Those two conversations produce very different outcomes.
When you bring tracked data to an appointment:
- Name the pattern, not just the symptom. "My mood drops are cyclical and correlate with hormone fluctuation" is more clinically actionable than "I've been having mood swings."
- Note whether it's new. If these patterns have emerged or intensified in the last 1–2 years, say so explicitly. New-onset mood symptoms in your 40s are a perimenopause signal.
- Ask about the hormonal component directly. "Based on this data, could my mood symptoms have a hormonal driver? Is there a case for adjusting my hormone therapy or adding hormonal support?"
- Bring the visual. A chart showing mood ratings overlaid with hormone levels over six weeks is harder to dismiss than a verbal summary.
If you're already on HRT, tracking is how you know whether your current dose is working, or whether the mood symptoms persisting after starting hormone therapy suggest your estradiol or progesterone levels aren't yet optimized.
A Simple 8-Week Tracking Protocol
If you want to start today, here's a structure that works:
Weeks 1–2: Set up your tracking system. Choose your hormone testing method (daily urine strips give the most granular data). Set a daily reminder for your mood ratings, same time each evening. Keep it to the five metrics above: mood, anxiety, irritability, brain fog, sleep.
Weeks 3–4: Track consistently without looking for patterns yet. Resist the urge to interpret too early. Note your cycle day or date each day.
Weeks 5–6: Begin reviewing weekly. Look at your lowest mood days and cross-reference with your hormone data. Are there consistent hormonal events on or before those days?
Weeks 7–8: Compile a simple summary: What days did your mood dip most? What were your hormone levels doing? What physical symptoms coincided? What did sleep look like?
By week 8, most women have enough data to see at least one clear pattern, often more.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many weeks of data do I need before tracking is useful?
Four weeks gives you a starting point, but 8 weeks produces a more reliable pattern, especially in perimenopause, where cycles are irregular and a single cycle may not be representative. The more data you have, the more confident you can be in what you're seeing.
Can I track mood without tracking hormones and still find patterns?
Yes, but with limitations. Cycle-day mood tracking, recording your mood against where you are in your cycle, can reveal PMS patterns without hormone data. The limitation is that in perimenopause, cycle length becomes unpredictable, and the hormone fluctuations that drive mood shifts don't always align neatly with cycle day. Quantitative hormone data closes that gap.
My cycles are irregular. Can I still track?
Yes, and irregular cycles are themselves a data point. Track by date rather than cycle day, and note when your period arrives retroactively. Over time, even irregular data shows hormonal patterns. Erratic estrogen fluctuations are particularly visible in daily urine-based hormone testing.
I've already been diagnosed with an anxiety disorder. Should I still track?
Absolutely, and arguably more so. Hormone mood tracking can help distinguish which of your anxiety symptoms have a hormonal driver and which don't, and on which days hormonal support might reduce the burden on your existing anxiety management tools. The relationship between perimenopause and anxiety disorders is complex, and the two frequently coexist. Understanding your hormonal contribution helps your treatment team work with the full picture.
What if I notice a pattern but my doctor dismisses it?
Ask for a referral to a certified menopause practitioner (NAMS-certified) or a reproductive psychiatrist. Bring your data in chart form. You can also frame it as: "I'm not asking for a diagnosis, I'm asking you to help me interpret this pattern." Quantitative data changes the conversation.
About the author

Sources
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