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Polycystic Ovary Syndrome Health Centre
Medical Description |
PCOS, also known as Stein-Leventhal Syndrome, can include the following symptoms or increase a woman’s risk for the following conditions:
- polycystic ovaries
- amenorrhea (no menstrual period)
- infrequent and/or irregular periods
- infrequent or absent ovulation (oligomenorrhea or anovulation)
- infertility or subfertility
- excess hair on the face and body (hirsutism)
- acne or oily skin
- thinning of the scalp hair
- high blood pressure
- high levels of cholesterol and triglycerides in the blood
- elevated insulin levels or insulin resistance
- type 2 diabetes
- patches of darkened skin (acanthosis nigricans)
- weight gain or obesity, often with excess weight in the abdomen
- excess androgen (hormones which produce male sexual characteristics)
- skin tags
The exact cause of PCOS is unknown. In the past, it was thought that PCOS was caused entirely by the excess production of androgens (also called “male hormones,” although these hormones are usually found in small amounts in women). More recent research has shown that insulin resistance and high levels of insulin (hyperinsulinemia), which appear to cause the overproduction of androgens, play a key role in PCOS (see the link below).
Both insulin resistance and high levels of androgens lead to disturbances in the production of the female hormones, such as follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and luteinizing hormone (LH). These are the hormones that control a woman's menstrual cycle and drive ovulation. All of these factors, in turn, contribute to the irregular menstrual cycles and the pattern of missed ovulation of women with PCOS.
The condition is called polycystic ovary syndrome because the ovaries of some women with PCOS appear to have multiple cysts. Hormonal disruptions disturb the normal mechanisms of follicle growth and ovulation. The polycystic appearance of the ovaries is created by follicles, which have failed to develop and release mature eggs (ova). However, not all women with PCOS have ovaries that appear polycystic and not all women with polycystic ovaries have PCOS.
 
Last Updated: September 2008
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