Can PCOS Go Away?



PCOS is the most common endocrine (hormonal) condition among females in the world. It’s a condition that deeply affects around 150 million women worldwide. That’s not a typo either — 150 million worldwide! It’s a condition that can have an immense impact on your physical and emotional well being. It’s also the leading cause of fertility issues among women.

The first issue is that PCOS is a medical diagnosis, but there’s no surgery to ‘fix’ PCOS, there’s no medication that fixes PCOS so, getting the medical diagnosis simply informs you that your PCOS, it will most likely do little to help you treat it.

Even now, 85 years after the first cases of PCOS were first diagnosed, there’s no PCOS-specific medication, not one. Metformin is primarily used to control blood glucose (sugar) levels in people who have type 2 diabetes.

Spironolactone, often prescribed to women with PCOS to reduce excessive hair growth is actually used to treat high blood pressure and heart failure.

This is the main reason why many doctors aren’t too great at providing the care you need for your PCOS — they are trained in medicine, but, as I’ve just mentioned there’s no medicine to treat PCOS. Worse still is those doctors who simply prescribe birth control as soon as they diagnose a woman with PCOS.

Some women have asked me if having a hysterectomy may solve PCOS? No, because PCOS doesn’t start in your ovaries so, having your ovaries taken out does not resolve the underlying root cause of your PCOS.

Other women have asked me if menopause may finally relieve you of your PCOS? Unfortunately, again it’s a no, because PCOS affects your menstrual cycle, it’s not triggered by it. Therefore, through menopause when your menstrual cycle becomes infrequent, and then stops altogether due to a lack of quality eggs, this does not directly impact the underlying cause of PCOS.

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