Your hormones are impacted by the frequent disorder known as polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS). It results in infertility, excessive hair growth, acne, and irregular menstrual cycles. Whether or not you want to get pregnant will affect your PCOS treatment. PCOS sufferers may be more susceptible to diseases like diabetes and high blood pressure. Your ovaries—the organ responsible for producing and releasing eggs—may produce too many hormones, which can lead to the hormonal imbalance known as polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS). Your ovaries produce exceptionally high levels of androgens if you have PCOS. Your reproductive hormones fall out of balance as a result. Those who with PCOS frequently experience irregular menstrual cycles, missed periods, and uncertain ovulation as a result. If you don't ovulate, you can have little follicular cysts on your ovaries that are fluid-filled sacs with developing eggs (anovulation). Despite the moniker "polycystic," you don't have need to have ovarian cysts to have PCOS. The ovarian cysts are neither uncomfortable nor hazardous.
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