What is Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome and Why Women Should Be Informed
The New Scare for Women
By Megan Duncan, published Oct 06, 2006
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As a woman who does not have regular menstrual cycles, I was concerned. But when I read that some women with irregular cycles cannot birth children I was kind of scared because even though I had made the choice to not have children I knew that the future was a tricky thing and I might someday meet someone I want to have children with, so I went to my doctor and was told about a condition called Polycystic Ovary Syndrome. I also learned that PCOS is not just an infertility problem with women and can lead to other symptoms that are potentially fatal.In the past PCOS has been viewed as an infertility problem. Not so anymore. Women with other symptoms such as acne and weight gain were told to exercise and eat less. That is was another one of those teenage problems. But PCOS is dangerous and often deadly if not diagnosed and even then treatments may cause more problems. And it's on the rise.
PCOS was first described in 1935 and named Stein-Levinthal Syndrome. At that time, doctors noticed tiny cysts covering ovaries and thought it just affected ovaries, causing excess body hair, irregular menses, infrequent ovulation, and follicles (cell in ovary containing ovum from which egg is released during ovulation) that did not develop but became multiple cysts.
PCOS affects 6%, or millions of premenopausel woman, teenagers, and prepubescent girls. Hormonal balance of PCOS can wreak havoc throughout the brain and body. It greatly increases a woman's risk of multiple health problems, starting in her early teens.
Some Symptoms:
By age 30, half of all women with PCOS have blood sugar problems with either impaired glucose regulation, producing too much insulin, or insensitivity to the your own body's insulin, or full blown diabetes.
Women with PCOS have greater risk of heart disease that can appear as early as their late 20's, early 30's.
Women ages 39-49 who have PCOS are four times more likely to have a heart attack then women who do not have PCOS.
Women with PCOS have a higher risk at younger ages of uterine and breast cancers.
You may also like...
- The "Thin Cyster" - A Skinny Girls Guide to Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome (PCOS)
- I Am Infertile - How I Dealt with Infertility and PCOS
- PCOS, Metformin and the Glycemic Index
- Treating PCOS with Vitamins and Herbs
- Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome: What, Why & How
- Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome... Rare?
- My Journey with Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome
- My Journey with Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome
- Infertility and Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome (PCOS)
- Infertility and the Fertility Awareness Method
Did You Know?
Many women today do not even realize they have PCOS and it can lead to complications later on in life.
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