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The Link Between Hormones and Panic Attacks
June 10, 2026 at 6:30 PM
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A panic attack can feel like it comes out of nowhere.

Your heart races. Your chest tightens. You feel shaky, hot, dizzy, or short of breath. Your mind may tell you something is seriously wrong, even if you are medically safe. For many women, panic attacks first appear—or suddenly worsen—during perimenopause or menopause.

This can be frightening, especially for women who have never experienced panic before. Many describe thinking, “Why is this happening now?” or “I’ve handled stress my whole life—why can’t I handle it anymore?”

The answer is often not simply stress. Hormonal changes can affect the nervous system, sleep, body temperature, and neurotransmitters involved in fear and emotional regulation. For some women, those changes can increase vulnerability to anxiety and panic symptoms.

Why It Happens

Perimenopause is the transition leading up to menopause. During this time, estrogen and progesterone levels fluctuate unpredictably before eventually declining. These shifts can affect multiple brain and body systems involved in panic.

Estrogen affects serotonin, dopamine, and stress regulation

Estrogen influences neurotransmitters involved in mood, anxiety, attention, and emotional regulation, including serotonin, dopamine, and norepinephrine. When estrogen levels fluctuate, some women become more sensitive to stress, worry, irritability, and panic-like symptoms. [1]

This is one reason anxiety can feel different during perimenopause. It may feel more physical, more sudden, and less connected to an obvious trigger.

Progesterone and GABA affect calm and relaxation

Progesterone is metabolized into neuroactive steroids such as allopregnanolone, which interacts with GABA-A receptors in the brain. GABA is one of the brain’s primary calming systems. Changes in progesterone and allopregnanolone sensitivity may contribute to increased anxiety, restlessness, and difficulty settling the nervous system. [2]

Some women describe this as feeling “wired but tired”—exhausted, but unable to relax.

Hot flashes can mimic panic attacks

Hot flashes and night sweats can cause sudden warmth, sweating, flushing, heart racing, and a feeling of internal alarm. These sensations can look and feel very similar to panic attacks.

For some women, the body sensation comes first, followed by fear: “Why is my heart racing?” or “Am I having a heart attack?” This fear can escalate into a full panic attack.

Sleep disruption lowers emotional resilience

Sleep problems are extremely common during the menopausal transition. Insomnia, night sweats, early morning waking, and fragmented sleep can worsen anxiety and reduce emotional resilience. [3]

When sleep is poor, the brain becomes more reactive. Everyday stressors feel bigger, physical sensations feel more threatening, and panic becomes more likely.

Perimenopause is a vulnerable window for psychiatric symptoms

Research increasingly recognizes perimenopause as a period of increased vulnerability for new or worsening psychiatric symptoms, including anxiety and mood disorders. Hormonal fluctuation is not the only factor, but it can interact with stress, sleep, trauma history, ADHD, medical conditions, and life transitions. [4]

Symptoms

Panic attacks can include emotional, physical, and cognitive symptoms.

Physical symptoms

Common physical symptoms include:

  • Racing or pounding heart
  • Chest tightness
  • Shortness of breath
  • Sweating
  • Trembling or shaking
  • Hot flashes or chills
  • Dizziness or lightheadedness
  • Nausea or stomach discomfort
  • Tingling or numbness
  • Feeling detached or unreal
Emotional symptoms

Women may experience:

  • Sudden fear or dread
  • Feeling out of control
  • Fear of dying
  • Fear of fainting
  • Fear of “going crazy”
  • Intense overwhelm
Hormone-related clues

Panic symptoms may be hormone-related if they occur alongside:

  • Irregular periods
  • Hot flashes
  • Night sweats
  • New or worsening insomnia
  • Increased irritability
  • Brain fog
  • Worsening PMS-like symptoms
  • New anxiety in the 40s or early 50s
  • Panic attacks that occur at night or around hormonal shifts

Not every panic attack during midlife is caused by hormones. Thyroid disease, cardiac concerns, medication side effects, stimulant use, substance use, trauma, and primary panic disorder can all contribute. That is why a thoughtful evaluation matters.

When to Seek Help

You should seek professional help if panic attacks:

  • Are new or worsening
  • Interfere with work, relationships, or sleep
  • Cause avoidance of driving, travel, stores, meetings, or social situations
  • Occur with depression or hopelessness
  • Are associated with heavy alcohol or substance use
  • Are accompanied by severe insomnia
  • Occur with hot flashes, night sweats, or menstrual changes
  • Make you feel unsafe or unable to function

Seek urgent medical attention if symptoms include new chest pain, fainting, severe shortness of breath, neurologic symptoms, or any concern for a medical emergency.

Also seek urgent mental health support if you experience thoughts of harming yourself or others.

Treatment Options

The best treatment depends on what is driving the panic symptoms.

Comprehensive evaluation

Before assuming panic is “just anxiety,” it is important to consider:

  • Perimenopause or menopause symptoms
  • Thyroid dysfunction
  • Sleep apnea or insomnia
  • Medication effects
  • Caffeine, alcohol, or cannabis use
  • Stimulant medication timing
  • Trauma history
  • ADHD and executive overload
  • Depression or bipolar spectrum symptoms
  • Cardiac or medical contributors when indicated

Hormone replacement therapy

For appropriate candidates, hormone replacement therapy may help reduce vasomotor symptoms such as hot flashes and night sweats, which can trigger or worsen panic-like episodes. The Menopause Society states that hormone therapy remains the most effective treatment for vasomotor symptoms. [5]

HRT is not appropriate for everyone. Personal history of breast cancer, blood clots, stroke, cardiovascular disease, liver disease, and other risk factors must be reviewed carefully.

Nonhormonal options for hot flashes and night sweats

For women who cannot or prefer not to use hormone therapy, evidence-based nonhormonal options may include SSRIs, SNRIs, gabapentin, oxybutynin, fezolinetant, cognitive behavioral therapy, clinical hypnosis, and weight loss when appropriate. [6]

Reducing hot flashes and night sweats can indirectly reduce panic triggers by improving sleep and decreasing sudden body alarm sensations.

Anxiety and panic treatment

Panic disorder and recurrent panic attacks are commonly treated with:

  • Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
  • Exposure-based therapy
  • SSRIs
  • SNRIs
  • Short-term supportive medications when clinically appropriate

CBT is one of the best-studied psychotherapies for panic disorder and helps patients understand body sensations, reduce fear of panic symptoms, and regain confidence. [7]

Sleep optimization

Because sleep disruption can drive anxiety, treatment may include:

  • CBT-I
  • Sleep hygiene
  • Treatment of night sweats
  • Evaluation for sleep apnea
  • Reducing alcohol
  • Reviewing medications that affect sleep

Lifestyle and nervous system regulation

Helpful strategies may include:

  • Regular exercise
  • Strength training
  • Reducing caffeine
  • Limiting alcohol
  • Breathwork
  • Mindfulness-based practices
  • Consistent meals and hydration
  • Stress reduction
  • Trauma-informed therapy when indicated

These strategies are not a replacement for medical care, but they can significantly support nervous system stability.

How Synchronous Mental Health Approaches It

At Synchronous Mental Health, we recognize that panic attacks in midlife are often more complex than “just anxiety.”

Using our whole-person approach, we evaluate the relationship between:

  • Hormones
  • Sleep
  • Executive functioning
  • Metabolic health
  • Mood and anxiety symptoms

As both a Family Nurse Practitioner and Psychiatric Mental Health Nurse Practitioner, Dr. Samuel “Joe” Cross-Sarvis is able to assess both psychiatric and medical contributors to panic symptoms.

Depending on the patient’s needs, treatment may include:

  • Comprehensive psychiatric evaluation
  • Medication management for anxiety or panic
  • Hormone replacement therapy evaluation and management
  • Sleep optimization
  • ADHD assessment and treatment
  • Lifestyle and metabolic health support
  • Collaboration with primary care, oncology, cardiology, or OB/GYN when appropriate

The goal is not simply to suppress panic symptoms. The goal is to understand why the nervous system is becoming activated and build a treatment plan that addresses the root contributors.

Final Thoughts

Panic attacks during perimenopause or menopause can be terrifying, but they are also understandable.

Hormonal fluctuations can affect serotonin, dopamine, GABA, sleep, body temperature, and stress regulation. When these systems shift, women may become more vulnerable to anxiety and panic—even if they have always been emotionally resilient.

If panic attacks are affecting your life, you do not have to simply endure them. With a comprehensive evaluation and individualized treatment plan, many women experience meaningful improvement in anxiety, sleep, mood, and overall quality of life.

Understanding the link between hormones and panic attacks is often the first step toward feeling safe in your body again.

References

  1. Soares CN. Mood disorders in midlife women: understanding the critical window and its clinical implications. Menopause. 2014;21(2):198-206.
  2. Hantsoo L, Epperson CN. Allopregnanolone in premenstrual dysphoric disorder: evidence for dysregulated sensitivity to GABA-A receptor modulating neuroactive steroids across the menstrual cycle. Neurobiology of Stress. 2020;12:100213.
  3. Baker FC, de Zambotti M, Colrain IM, Bei B. Sleep problems during the menopausal transition: prevalence, impact, and management challenges. Nature and Science of Sleep. 2018;10:73-95.
  4. McElhany AL, Kauffman RP, Schneider M, et al. The role of menopause hormone therapy in psychiatric symptoms and disorders. Current Psychiatry Reports. 2025.
  5. The North American Menopause Society. The 2022 hormone therapy position statement of The North American Menopause Society. Menopause. 2022;29(7):767-794.
  6. The North American Menopause Society. The 2023 nonhormone therapy position statement of The North American Menopause Society. Menopause. 2023;30(6):573-590.
  7. Papola D, Ostuzzi G, Tedeschi F, et al. CBT treatment delivery formats for panic disorder: a systematic review and network meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials. Psychological Medicine. 2023;53(3):614-624.