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SOS for PCOS

Live a Healthy Lifestyle

By Kelly Burgess

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Our generation's lifestyle is much different from that of our parents and grandparents. When they had a meal choice, it wasn't between an Italian or Chinese restaurant, but between eating what was on their plate or going to bed hungry. When they needed to go somewhere, they usually walked.

It's been recognized for a number of years now that our increase in food choices, many of them unhealthy, along with our decrease in physical activity, wreaks havoc with our bodies. Now this trend toward overnourishment has been linked to a rise in polycystic ovarian syndrome, or PCOS, which is the No. 1 cause of infertility. This discovery launched a movement calling for women to focus more intensively on lifestyle factors in treating PCOS, rather than relying on traditional infertility treatments.

The Rise of PCOS

PCOS is not a new condition, but despite the fact that it was first identified in 1935 (and was originally known as Stein-Leventhal syndrome after the doctors who discovered it), there has been no real agreement as to its cause. As recently as five years ago, according to Dr. Ronald Feinberg, author of Healing Syndrome O: A Strategic Guide to Fertility, Polycystic Ovaries, and Insulin Imabalance (Avery Publishing Group, 2004), many specialists still believed it to be primarily a result of dysfunctional or diseased ovaries, which was Stein's and Leventhal's original supposition. Others blame genetic or metabolic disorders.

What is not in dispute is the increased prevalence of PCOS. Back in the days of Stein and Leventhal, the good doctors saw a total of seven patients with this condition. Today, the National Institutes of Health estimate that PCOS affects five to 10 percent of all women of childbearing age.

"There's a long history tied to the attempts to define PCOS," says Dr. Feinberg. "What really has caused a lot of people to look at lifestyle issues is the sheer rise in the number of women from 1935 to present who are being diagnosed with this condition. Our genes haven't changed, so what has? The answer is our lifestyle, primarily diet and physical activity."

Syndromes X and O


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SOS for PCOS by Anonymous on 12/13/2009 01:21AM

I too have been diagnosed with PCOS. I too have had this condition since puberty and have never had a normal cycle. I have a child I concieved while taking chlomid after trying to start a family for over 5 years. I am not nor have I ever been over weight but I have always been told that becoming overweight is a possible result of the disease and not the cause of it. With so many people now falling into the category of overweight or obese, I think it is irresponsible to suggest that these factors alone have contributed to the rise in PCOS. I am sure that it was simply undiagnosed as woman then were not going to the gynecologist as much or seeking fertility assistance as they do today

Re: SOS for PCOS by anonymous on 05/12/2009 09:42PM

I have PCOS and I found this article hurtful and not true for many women with PCOS. When I was in a teenager and as an adult I am of normal weight, exercise daily and eat balanced meals and still have PCOS. I do have a daughter with the assistance of Metformin. I have always had irregular periods from the very start. I believe for many women this is genetic not caused by overeating. Also the picture of the heavy women eating pasta was very hateful. Get your facts strait.

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