Polycystic ovary syndrome: new perspective on an old problem

Southern Medical Journal, 94(2), 190-196

Source

Abstract

Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is the most common endocrinopathy in women of reproductive age. New treatment approaches resulting from a refined understanding of the pathophysiology are evolving. The literature shows that PCOS is an endocrinopathy resulting from insulin resistance and the compensatory hyperinsulinemia. This results in adverse effects on multiple organ systems and may result in alteration in serum lipids, anovulation, abnormal uterine bleeding, and infertility. In addition, PCOS may place the patient at long-term risk for the development of type 2 diabetes, hypertension, endometrial cancer, and cardiovascular disease. Oral contraceptives, progestins, antiandrogens, and ovulation induction agents remain standard therapies. However, insulin-sensitizing agents are now being shown to be useful alone or combined with standard therapies. Early identification of patients at risk and prompt initiation of therapies, followed by long-term surveillance and management, may promote the patient's long-term health.

Topics

PCOS insulin resistance hyperinsulinemia pathophysiology review, polycystic ovary syndrome long-term cardiovascular diabetes risk, insulin sensitizing agents PCOS treatment new perspective, PCOS endometrial cancer risk anovulation, Slowey polycystic ovary syndrome endocrinopathy review, PCOS metabolic syndrome type 2 diabetes prevention, oral contraceptives progestins antiandrogens PCOS management, polycystic ovary syndrome serum lipids hypertension risk, compensatory hyperinsulinemia ovarian androgen production PCOS, early identification PCOS long-term surveillance management

Cite this article

Slowey, M. J. (2001). Polycystic ovary syndrome: new perspective on an old problem. *Southern medical journal*, *94*(2), 190-196.

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