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PCOS CAUSES WEIGHT GAIN, DIABETES, INFERTILITY & MORE- Unaware They Have It or Getting Wrong Treatment

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Half of Women with PCOS - Unaware They Have It or Getting Wrong Treatment-

http://www.safetyalerts.com/t/g/PCOS.htm -

 

SafetyAlerts

February 21, 2002

Half of Women with PCOS - Unaware They Have It or Getting Wrong Treatment

 

Disorder That Can Cause Infertility, Weight Gain, Diabetes & More

(SafetyAlerts) - Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) affects an estimated 3.5

to 5 million American women, yet experts believe more than half don't know

they have this potentially dangerous disorder or are getting the wrong

treatment for it, reports the current (3/12) issue of Woman's Day magazine.

 

PCOS is a bodywide metabolic disorder fueled by abnormal levels of

hormones -- the all-important messengers from the brain to every part of the

body -- especially insulin. Essentially, the endocrine system goes haywire,

short-circuiting the hormones it regulates.

 

The disorder can affect everything from a woman's hair to her uterus, from

her skin to her blood sugar. It is a leading cause of infertility and can

also lead to obesity. Three-fourths of women with PCOS are overweight. All

may be at risk for diabetes, endometrial cancer, heart disease and stroke.

Studies indicate PCOS may be the most common cause of Type 2 diabetes in

premenopausal women.

 

Kerri S. Smith, the journalist who wrote this PCOS article and an earlier

one in 2000, states, " Like many women with the syndrome, for years doctors

told me that losing weight would solve all my problems -- especially my

chronically irregular or nonexistent menstrual periods. By the time I was

finally diagnosed, I also had endometrial cancer. At age 37, I had to have a

radical hysterectomy, and I'm still coping with a host of medical

complications. "

 

How can a woman tell if she has PCOS? Here are the symptoms to look for

(some women have only one or two, while others have an array): irregular or

absent periods; trouble getting pregnant; miscarriages; overweight or obese;

excessive amounts of facial or body hair; acne; diabetes; high blood

pressure, cholesterol or triglycerides; dark skin patches around your inner

thighs, armpits or neck.

 

Though women with PCOS are still often misdiagnosed and underestimated, the

outlook is changing, reports Woman's Day. Drug trials and research studies

are underway around the country. The National Institutes of Health is

funding studies to help women with PCOS conceive. Walter Futterweit, M.D.,

of the division of endocrinology at the Mt. Sinai School of Medicine here,

says, " Lots of exciting things are going on. It's huge. "

 

Source: PR Newswire

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