polycystic ovarian syndrome

Re: polycystic ovarian syndrome

Thanks syani1 and Barfee. I think doctors can sometimes make things seem a lot scarier than they might be. For example I know two women who were diagnosed with PCOS and mashallah were able to have children. One actually went through some kind of treatment in Pakistan (I think she said she had to lose a certain amount of weight and then undergo an operation but I'm not sure) and the other was told she would not be able to have children but she ended up having a baby with her 2nd husband mashallah.

Re: polycystic ovarian syndrome

sounds very scary i know, some Syndrome but its not tat bad... i've been dealing with it for da past 10 yrs.
I had my son 4 mths after my marriage. it was quite a surprise.
i had to be on da pill for at least 6 mths and once ur period is regular, i think more or less u r back to normal provided u maintain da healty weight.

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The doctor considered whether or not I had PCOS cuz I didn't have most of the symptoms but I did have some. It can be very difficult to diagnose so make sure you check with your doctor. Once I got the ultrasound done, they figured I did not have it (thank goodness), but you do need to actually test in order to be sure, because a lot of times people see the symptoms and assume PCOS is the cause when it is not.

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nisa its not scary :~)
IF it was up to me i would have made myself the most healthiest person on earth OH well. I do thank Allah people out there have a lot more issues then me :~)

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i have this sydrome, and my sister too, it is easy to diagnose with an echography of the ovaries, it is showing the cystis on the ovaries.
there is no cure to this sydrome, it is possible to take some hormonal pills, to regulate menses acne and hair, but bear in mind you have to stop it to get pregnant anyway, so it is just a temporary stuf…i have to add also that these hormone tend to make the weight increase :rolleyes:
i lost 15 kg since i stopped these pills, and i am o lot more fit, muscular, less fat and less tired…so i have no treatment, i do laser for my body hair, and i apply some cream for acne…but no more pills!

the weight issue is just crap, doctors are just gambling on it…some people get perios regular when loosing weight if it is weight the cause of your deasease…but it is not the only cause! for example my sister is very slim, but she has the deasease like me…so it is very possible that the desease is inherited…but doctors don’t know anything about it…that’s why they don’t know how to treat it properly…

the deasease is related to a global mysfuntion of hormones, but modern reasearch on hormones is not advanced enough to know what is wrong and what is right…keep in mind ladies that doctors don’t have full knowledge, and that they are just experimenting with your bodies, to check what is working or not…as if we were their lab mouses…so be carefull, and don’t accpet anything!

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Parissenoor, good for you! Congratulations on all you've been able to achieve. I know it's not a simple thing. Thank God for laser hair removal, huh? It's been an absolute life saver for me. My treatments are almost fully completed, I've been going for a year now, and I am very happy with the results.

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my sister was operated from an ovary for some prblem...the doctor checked her condition...and said that there will be two ways for her to get pregnant, first take special pill to stimulate the ovaries...and try to get pregnant the old fashioned way:D....
or if it fails, operate to make micro cuts in the ovaries skin (that is too thick) so that the matured eggs can go out to the uterus

Re: polycystic ovarian syndrome

:smack: why do I open such threads.

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parisinoor lol you made doctors sound more evil than I ever do! I dont think its that bad. Mine never told me i would be cured, she told me that they dont know the exact cause but there have been treatments that have worked for many women. Thats what the treatment is based on, well you gotta work with what you have, right? You cant just not treat it cuz docs dont knwo exactly what they are doing. I still have hope about losing weight because i have always had a hard time losing weight. If i dont work out, eat normal, i gain weight. I have to watch what i eat to keep it stable. So to me the whole weight thing is important.

nia its never too late, why not start now? I wish i had been this serious about it before.

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Its scary how so many women are effected by it and this is just GS :-/

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its ok ashtray..... increasing ur general knowledge hardly calls for a smack on ur forehead hehehe

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barfee, at least 10% women hve it;)

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me too:D…but what doctors gave me made me EVEN MORE FAT:cb:…
i lost weight when i got rid of my doc:D…and medicines:blush:

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^ I know but its like you can have a nice figure or regular periods :smack:
Did you cut our carbs?

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i prefer nice figure over regular periods:D
plus who want to have period every months:cb:…when we can be freeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee!!!

i prefer eating fatty food..so yes cutting carbs was a big part of the diet…but honestly, i’m still fat! but my figure is better balanced and more sexy:blush: than with medicines…i used to look puffy like an elephant:D

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so you lost weight even when u were eating fatty foods? :smack:

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sure fat is veru helpfull for good health!!

a good balanced diet, is made of more fat than standards advices from doctors…cause top researchers promoting cutting carbs are severly looked downed by farmers and food processing companies:D

Re: polycystic ovarian syndrome

** Xylitol And Insulin Resistance, Diabetes Hypertension, And Hormonal Imbalances**
Consuming sugar and other refined carbohydrates results in the rapid release of glucose, or blood sugar. In response, the pancreas secretes insulin to usher glucose into the cells, where it is burned for energy. Excess glucose stresses the system, and over time the cells become less responsive to insulin. This condition, known as insulin resistance, is a huge health problem and it is estimated to affect half the American population. Insulin resistance is associated with abnormalities in cholesterol and triglyceride levels, hypertension, increased risk of heart disease, and diabetes.

The dramatic rise in type-2 diabetes since the mid-1900s directly coincides with our increased consumption of sugar. One long-term study of more than 65,000 women demonstrated that a high-sugar, low-fibre diet increased the risk of type-2 diabetes by 250%. Another recent study found that excessive intake of sugar was the single most important dietary risk factor for heart disease in women and for men. It has been estimated that sugar intake may account for more than 150,000 premature deaths from heart disease in the United States each year.12

Xylitol has been demonstrated in repeated clinical studies to be very slowly metabolised. In fact, on the glycemic index, which measures how quickly foods enter the bloodstream, sugar is rated at 100 and xylitol at just seven! Xylitol is a natural insulin stabilizer, therefore it causes none of the abrupt rises and falls that occur with sugar. In fact, it actually helps in stopping sugar and carbohydrate cravings. Foods sweetened with xylitol will not raise insulin levels. This makes it a perfect sweetener for people with diabetes as well as those wanting to lose weight. There is a growing consensus amongst anti-aging researchers that maintaining low insulin levels is a key to a successful anti-aging program.

Insulin resistance also plays a significant role in hormonal imbalances, including those that lead to breast cancer. High insulin levels increase the production of estrogens, leading to an estrogen-dominant condition, and also interfere with healthy ovarian function. Insulin resistance is a major cause of a growing hormonal problem called polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS). PCOS causes the ovaries to become anovulatory, which means that the normal cyclic production of estrogen followed by progesterone either ceases or becomes dysfunctional. Insulin stimulates the ovaries to produce predominantly male hormones, which, in combination with higher insulin and glucose levels, increase weight gain around the waist-a body type that is a risk factor for breast cancer. Signs that the body is being exposed to higher levels of the male hormones include acne, loss of head hair, and an increase in body hair. Lowering insulin levels is crucial for not only treating PCOS but also resolving most other hormonal imbalances, including those leading to breast cancer.13

Dr. John Lee, author of What Your Doctor May Not Tell You About Breast Cancer, explains the connection between insulin resistance and breast cancer:

"Overeating junk food makes you fat. Increased body fat and lack of exercise lead to insulin resistance. Insulin resistance leads to further craving of sugary carbohydrates to generate energy for the body. More insulin is released in response to increased carbohydrate intake, leading to more weight gain. More fat leads to more estrogens, which, in turn, lead to earlier breast development and menstruation. Earlier onset of menstruation leads to more ovulatory cycles and a greater lifetime exposure to estrogens without adequate progesterone. A greater lifetime exposure to estrogens increases breast cancer risk.

"Simultaneously, increased consumption of simple carbohydrates, coupled with insulin resistance, leads to polycystic ovaries and lack of ovulation during menstrual cycles, resulting in excess production of androgens and estrogens, along with inadequate production of progesterone. Excessive estrogen production in the absence of progesterone production leads to estrogen dominance and increased breast cancer risk. Use of contraceptive hormones increases insulin resistance, exacerbating all the above problems."14

Using xylitol instead of sugar, as well as reducing intake of high-glycemic, refined carbohydrate foods, helps to lower the risk not only of PCOS but also of ovarian cysts, fibroids, endometriosis, PMS, hot flashes, weight gain, and depression.

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thanks for posting Barfee, but i'd like to say that though i have PCOS, my body type is NOT concentrated around the waist...more around hips and breasts, thighs or arms ...my estrogen level is very low and my male hormones level are normal!

so all that is described by this doc about consequences of insuline resistance do not apply to me..that's why i don't believe ths doctors...in fact they don't uderstand human body....just a some people that fit into their statistics....but i don't