The Ultimate PCOS Handbook: Lose weight, boost fertility, clear skin and restore self-esteem. Theresa Cheung
with insulin resistance have raised levels of insulin in their bloodstream, and high levels of insulin have been shown to stimulate the ovaries to produce more testosterone and lower blood levels of SHBG, resulting in higher and more active levels of testosterone.
‘I only found out I had insulin resistance as well as PCOS when I got pregnant. Tests revealed that my blood sugar levels were all over the place.’
Alice, 36
WHAT IS INSULIN RESISTANCE?
Insulin is a powerful hormone released by your pancreas in response to eating food – especially carbohydrates. It transports sugar out of the blood and into muscle, fat and liver cells, where it’s converted to energy or stored as fat. Many women with PCOS have insulin resistance. This means that the process of getting the sugar out of the blood and into the cells is defective – the cells are ‘resistant’ to insulin. The pancreas must secrete more and more insulin to get sugar out of the blood and into the cells. High levels of insulin, or hyperinsulinaemia, can trigger weight gain, problems with ovulation, an increased risk of diabetes, difficulty losing weight and an increased risk of heart disease by raising LDL (the unhealthy cholesterol) and triglyceride levels and decreasing HDL (the healthy cholesterol).
THYROID PROBLEMS
Your thyroid is a gland at the bottom of your neck. It weighs less than an ounce but has an enormous effect on your health. All aspects of your metabolism, from the rate at which your heart beats to how quickly you burn calories, are regulated by your thyroid hormones.
If your thyroid releases the proper amount of hormones, body systems function normally. But if your thyroid doesn’t produce enough it causes hypothyroidism (underactive thyroid), and upsets the delicate balance of chemical reactions in your body. Symptoms include fatigue, weight gain, irregular periods and high blood pressure (sound familiar?). If you’re overweight and have irregular periods and insulin resistance, it seems your risk of developing hypothyroidism is higher.
Many of the symptoms of hypothyroidism correspond with the symptoms of PCOS, and there do seem to be strong links between the two conditions. At present there just isn’t enough evidence to suggest that thyroid problems may have a causal link with PCOS, but early research10 suggests there may well be a connection of some kind.
An interesting study illustrated this by investigating the relationship between polycystic ovary syndrome, hypothyroidism and insulin-resistance and how, by submitting patients to a specific therapy for any one of these three problems, the researchers were able to obtain an improvement in the other associated conditions.11
This study suggests that there are several ways to improve PCOS symptoms and increase fertility. If a single therapy can be effective, a combination might be even better.
THE CORTISOL CONNECTION
There may also be a link between PCOS and the production of the stress hormone cortisol. Studies12 have indicated that high testosterone levels associated with PCOS could be caused by a fault in the way the body produces Cortisol. This is the active form of the hormone released into the body by the adrenal gland to help it cope with stress and is turned into cortisone, the inactive form, by enzymes in the body. Researchers have found that some women with PCOS don’t have these enzymes. This means their bodies cannot process cortisol properly, causing higher levels of testosterone to be produced.
This suggests that stress may play a part in the development of PCOS. If you’re under stress your adrenal glands release the stress hormones – adrenaline and cortisol, as well as testosterone – to help you cope with that stress. If there’s a problem with the conversion of cortisol, you produce too much testosterone and this makes your symptoms worse and drives your body towards the classic PCOS symptoms of insulin resistance, weight gain and irregular periods. More research needs to be done, but knowing that stress may be a contributory factor can help you to take steps to ‘stress-proof’ your life, and you can do this with our action plan on page 266.
THE ENDOCRINE WEB
All these hormone theories – insulin, testosterone, LH, cortisol and thyroid problems – are in fact linked. This is because the endocrine (hormone) system regulating your blood sugar and insulin levels, as well as your sex hormones and stress hormones, is a sensitive web of interconnections. If one hormone is out of kilter, the others will be affected, too.
‘We know that normal ovulation requires the perfect synchronization of hormones in the body. PCOS causes shifts in hormone levels, rendering normal ovulation unlikely. The lack of ovulation is largely to blame for the infertility aspect of PCOS, while the hormone imbalance is responsible for the associated symptoms of unwanted hair growth and acne.’13
Clearly in PCOS there are hormonal imbalances, but we still don’t know which one is ultimately responsible for triggering the chain-reaction that causes PCOS symptoms or, in fact, if it’s something external that jump-starts the imbalance.
COULD IT START IN THE WOMB?
Some researchers believe that PCOS is caused before you are born. A slight increase in testosterone levels occurs during pregnancy, especially in the first 14 weeks when the foetus’ ovaries are developing. The placenta has a large amount of an enzyme called aromatase which converts testosterone into oestrogen, but there have been reports of female foetuses becoming masculinized by androgen-secreting tumours. This suggests the possibility that an excessive amount of male hormones could alter a female foetus’ developing ovaries.
It’s also been suggested that insulin resistance may start in the uterus. If the mother is nutrient deficient, it’s possible that she sends a signal to her foetus that starvation is a possibility. The foetus, therefore, becomes insulin resistant as in times of famine, because the fat storage that this encourages has certain advantages. So far, studies14 haven’t confirmed this hypothesis, but if it were true then low-weight or small babies would have a higher risk of PCOS, when in fact the opposite is true: research15 has shown that babies who are overweight and overdue have a higher risk of developing PCOS later in life.
IS YOUR WEIGHT TO BLAME?
Being overweight increases insulin levels dramatically and makes PCOS symptoms worse. Studies16 have shown that losing weight can not only reduce the symptoms of PCOS but can also help normalize ovulation, boost fertility and resolve hormonal problems.
Weight loss is so beneficial because it results in lower insulin levels, which in turn can reduce testosterone levels. Trouble is, as you’ll see in Part 2, if you’ve got PCOS you’re far more likely to have difficulty losing weight.
But does weight gain cause PCOS? Even though a woman with PCO who puts a lot of weight on might start to get PCOS symptoms, most experts believe that weight gain is a symptom, not a cause, of the syndrome, because research17 shows that slim women can and do report PCOS symptoms too.
DIET AND LIFESTYLE TRIGGERS?
Fertility studies indicate that both eating disorders and poor diets (e.g. diets high in fat, sugar and carbohydrate and low in nutrients) can and do affect the function of the ovaries. This is because a poor diet triggers the release of too much insulin, increasing the risk of an overproduction of testosterone and PCOS. And it’s been suggested18 that