While some experts claim that virtually all menstruating women experience PMS, a more recent and intermediate position shows that a only small percentage of women (2 to 5%) have significant premenstrual symptoms that are separate from the discomfort associated with menstruation.

For some women with PMS, the symptoms are so severe that they are considered disabling. This form of PMS has its own psychiatric designation: premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD).
Culturally, the abbreviation PMS is widely understood in the United States (and other countries, for example Australia) to refer to difficulties associated with menses, and the abbreviation is used frequently even in casual and colloquial settings, without regard to medical rigor. In these contexts, the syndrome is rarely referred to without abbreviation, and the connotations of the reference are frequently more broad than the clinical definition.
From:Wikipedia(Yahoo)I might have been suffering from this!!!.....ergh.............*dun look at my breast*......Oh My God.....i think i shud use the word...i got the symptoms!!!!!!*nt de breast tender one*...BUT i think could change them in any ways....haiz....give me times give me times......i nit times......
TIMES!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

It's going to be 1am now..i am gonna jump myself up the bed....so c u all!!!!!nites......!!!!=)
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