You might find having polycystic ovary syndrome upsetting. It can make it harder to have children. Some symptoms, like unwanted body hair, can be embarrassing. But you're not alone. Lots of women have this condition. And there are some good treatments that can help.
PCOS is sometimes called polycystic ovarian syndrome or polycystic ovary disease.
- Polycystic ovary syndrome means you have problems with your hormones, particularly the ones that are made in your ovaries.
- You may have irregular periods, or even none at all. You may also get unwanted hair on your face and body, put on weight, and have oily or spotty skin.
- Having PCOS can mean problems getting pregnant for some women. But lots of women with PCOS are able to have children, either with or without treatment.
- Losing weight may help with some of the symptoms of PCOS.
- There are also several drugs that can help women with PCOS.
- Your periods
- Getting pregnant
- The way your hair grows on your face, head and body
- Your skin
- Your weight.
As well as making hormones, your ovaries release eggs. Usually, your ovaries release one egg a month. This is called ovulation.

The hormones in your body all affect each other. For example, insulin is a hormone that controls how much sugar (glucose) you have in your bloodstream. But the amount of insulin in your blood also has an effect on the amount of androgens your body produces.1 Androgen hormones affect your sex drive, your skin, the way your hair grows and how much energy you have.
If you have polycystic ovary syndrome, some of the hormones in your body are out of balance.1 Usually, the hormones that affect your period go up and down through your menstrual cycle. If you have PCOS, they may stay at the same level instead.2
This means that the parts of your body that are controlled by these hormones may not work the way they should. Your ovaries may not release eggs regularly. So you don't get regular periods. This can make it hard for you to get pregnant.
As well as affecting your periods, hormones affect lots of other things your body does. Androgen hormones can change fine hairs on your body into longer, thicker hair, like the hair that grows on your head, in your armpits or in your bikini area. Women with PCOS sometimes have slightly raised levels of androgens. This can cause thicker hair in unwanted places.
Androgens can also make the pores in your skin produce more oil. This can give you pimples (acne).3
PCOS also seems to affect the way your body responds to a hormone called insulin. Insulin affects the amount of sugar in your blood and the way your body uses energy. Having a lot of insulin can also make you produce more androgens.
Doctors think that your hormones are likely to have been out of balance right from when you first started to get your periods. But you might not notice it for a few years, because young girls often have irregular periods at first.1
Women with PCOS often have small swellings, or cysts, on their ovaries. That's how polycystic ovary syndrome got its name. Polycystic means lots of cysts. Doctors don't know exactly why some women get these cysts.
Often, putting on weight can make the symptoms of PCOS more noticeable. Doctors don't think that having PCOS makes you overweight, but women with PCOS often find it very hard to lose weight.1
We don't know why some women get polycystic ovary syndrome. But it seems to run in families. So, the genes you inherit from your parents may play a part.4
- In about 4 in 10 women with PCOS, they have a sister with it.
- In about 2 in 10 women with PCOS, their mother had it.
- Ehrmann DA. Polycystic Ovary Syndrome. New England Journal of Medicine. 2005; 352: 1223-1236.
- Hoyt KL, Schmidt MC. Polycystic Ovary (Stein-Leventhal) Syndrome: etiology, complications and treatment. Clinical Laboratory Science. 2004; 17: 155-163.
- Rosenfield RL. Hirsutism. New England Journal of Medicine. 2005; 353: 2578-2588.
- Richardson MR. Current Perspectives in Polycystic Ovary Syndrome. American Family Physician. 2003; 68: 697-704. 12952386








