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Re: HELP I think i may have this condition, and i have some questions which i hope you could answer...From: tera (anonymous@obgyn.net)Mon, 21 Apr 2003 12:15:14 -0500 (CDT)
Hi! Your post is a very interesting one and I hope that many will read it and my answer to you. First, I am not going to say that you do not have PCOS. You may well have it. But I have a few things to say about your symptoms in regard to weight. Just the weight alone can cause your many if not most of your symptoms. Weight can cause hormone imbalance that can cause you to stop having a period, to not get a period at all or to get irregular periods. Weight can also cause hormone imbalances and this can cause the excess facial and body hair and irregular periods (like I mentioned above). It can also interfere with ovulation which can effect your fertility (but this does not happen to everyone and many overweight women concieve) and it can put you at risk for IR and eventually type two diabetes. So, with that said, I do think that there are many women who are overweight with the symptoms that come from being overweight who are diagnosed with PCOS who really do not have PCOS. For these women, weight loss will take care of most all of their symptoms. Likewise, I think there are many women with PCOS who are overweight because of their PCOS and who are told to lose weight because it will solve their problems. BUT, weightloss will NOT solve the problems caused by PCOS. It might HELP to ease the symptoms but it will not cause the symptoms to go away entirely. There is no cure for PCOS. So, there is no total cure yet from symptoms caused by PCOS. BUT there is a cure for symptoms caused by excess weight and that would be weight loss. I would go to a doctor that knows a lot about PCOS and how to treat it - an informed OBGYN or a Reproductive Endocrinologist for more tests because if you do have PCOS, it sounds like you'd definately benefit from Metformin which is a diabetic medication which will help you much like you low carb diet is helping you. This med will help you to lose weight and you should not gain weight on it. It is THE medication that is being used to get at the source of PCOS (insulin resistance) if PCOS is your problem and we already know that IR is a problem for you. If you have PCOS, it is the IR that is most likely the source of your weight gain. If you have PCOS, your low carb diet will have a significant effect on your IR - but you can also use Metformin or Glucophage along with it and you might see even further results. Infertility is very common with many women with PCOS because not only do many not get regular periods but many of them ovulate either irregularly or not at all. Most of the time the infertility from PCOS is caused by hormone imbalances that impair ovulation. Lack of Ovulation impairs the release of progesterone which then will often lead to irregular periods or lack of periods because the release of progesterone after ovulation is what will cause you to have a period. (Although, getting periods does not always mean that you ovulated.) Many women with PCOS have been able to conceive. Some PCOS women conceive naturally and some use Metformin and/or low carb dieting and some use infertility treatment. IMPORTANT - being overweight does NOT put you at risk for PCOS. Either you have PCOS or you don't. There are many women with PCOS who are thin and where weight is not an issue. God bless, Tera
At Mon, 21 Apr 2003, anonymous wrote:
>
-- Tera
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