WHAT IS PCOS?
PCOS is a common hormone disorder that affects one in ten women in the UK.
It can be devastating to a woman’s self-esteem and quality of life. As if this weren’t bad enough, many cases are missed because the pill is often prescribed to young women for painful and/or irregular periods and this can mask symptoms. It is often only when you are unable to get pregnant or experience miscarriages that explorations uncover the condition.
PCOS manifests differently in each person.
Common signs and symptoms can include the following:
· Irregular periods or no periods
· Fertility issues/difficulty getting pregnant
· Fatigue
· Sleep issues
· Excessive hair growth where it shouldn’t be, e.g. face, chest and back
· Resistance to weight loss (although many sufferers are not overweight)
· Hair loss, thinning hair on the head
· Mood changes (anxious, low mood)
· Pain/headaches
· Oily skin/acne
· Miscarriage
Does this sound like you?
What’s happening inside?
What’s happening inside is that too much of a hormone called luteinising hormone (LH) stimulates your ovaries to make too much of the male hormone testosterone. Testosterone stops the follicles from developing properly, which can stop ovulation (this affects your ability to get pregnant). Too much testosterone may mean you grow facial or body hair, start to lose hair, or get thinner hair around the scalp (aka ‘male pattern baldness’). Your body might also have a problem with insulin, the hormone that controls your blood sugar and fat storage. Over time, receptors on the surface of cells become less sensitive to insulin, so your body has to produce more and more to take the sugar out of your blood and into the cells, where it can be used as energy. Too much insulin also causes your ovaries to produce testosterone and prevents the liver from producing another hormone called sex hormone binding globulin (SHBG), which mops up any excess testosterone. Women with insulin resistance may also be at risk of developing heart disease in later life, however, risk factors for heart disease may be increased with PCOS, there is no clear evidence that heart attacks are common in women with PCOS and those that do not have the condition. There’s another downside to excess insulin in the body: It leads to high levels of sugar in the blood and this can, in time, cause type 2 diabetes.
Who gets PCOS?
The exact cause is not known, but PCOS is thought to run in families. Researchers suspect PCOS is influenced by genes and possibly exposure to androgens (male hormones) and environmental toxins in the womb. But a genetic tendency to PCOS does not mean you have to suffer the symptoms – you can modify them through diet and lifestyle.
Getting tested
If you think you might have PCOS, make an appointment to see your GP and they can run some tests. Your GP will be looking for evidence of irregular periods, enlarged ovaries containing many fluid-filled sacs that surround the eggs (despite the name these are not actually cysts), and high levels of androgens. Raised levels of prolactin (in some women with PCOS) The ideal way to get a diagnosis is to have an ultrasound scan and a blood test. Although insulin resistance and elevated luteinizing hormone are common, they are not required for diagnosis.
Making changes
Because insulin has such an important role to play, a diet with a low glycaemic load (known as a low GL diet) is the best place to start. The GL of foods explains how quickly your blood glucose (blood sugar) rises after eating carbohydrates. Low GL foods can improve and help balance insulin levels.