Healthy food plate for PCOS management
Health
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PCOS Symptoms: How to Manage It With Diet and Lifestyle

Beauty & Blushed Editors

Beauty & Blushed Editors

March 18, 2025

PCOS affects 1 in 5 Indian women and is the leading cause of irregular periods. Here is how diet and lifestyle changes can make a real difference.

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Key Takeaways

  • PCOS is driven by insulin resistance-a low-glycaemic diet is the most effective dietary approach.
  • Weight loss of just 5-10% of body weight can significantly restore hormonal balance.
  • Strength training improves insulin sensitivity more effectively than cardio alone.
  • Inositol is one of the most researched supplements for PCOS and insulin sensitivity.
  • Stress raises cortisol which worsens PCOS-stress management is a medical necessity.

Understanding PCOS: More Than Just Irregular Periods

Polycystic ovary syndrome - PCOS - is the most common hormonal disorder affecting women of reproductive age globally, and yet it remains dramatically underdiagnosed, frequently misunderstood, and often inadequately managed. In India, studies suggest that between 9 and 22 percent of women of reproductive age have PCOS, making it an issue that touches an enormous number of families. Despite its name and its most well-known symptom of ovarian cysts, PCOS is fundamentally a metabolic and endocrine disorder that extends far beyond the reproductive system.

To receive a PCOS diagnosis, a woman needs to meet two out of three of the following criteria (the Rotterdam criteria): irregular or absent periods (indicating irregular ovulation), elevated androgens (male hormones like testosterone) either measured in blood or evident through symptoms, and polycystic ovaries on ultrasound (multiple small follicles, though "cysts" is somewhat misleading - they are more accurately described as small, immature follicles that have not released an egg). The hormonal root of PCOS is complex and varies between individuals, which is why its presentation looks so different from person to person.

PCOS is not simply a gynaecological inconvenience. Untreated or poorly managed, it is associated with significantly increased risk of type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease, endometrial cancer, non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, and mental health conditions including depression and anxiety. Understanding it as the whole-body metabolic condition it is - not merely a reproductive issue - is the foundation of effective management.

Signs and Symptoms of PCOS

Irregular or Missing Periods

The hallmark of PCOS is anovulation - cycles during which no egg is released. When ovulation does not occur, the endometrium (uterine lining) continues to build up without the normal hormonal signal to shed, resulting in periods that are unpredictable, infrequent (fewer than eight per year), absent for months at a time, or very heavy when they do occur because of the accumulated lining. Some women with PCOS have regular-seeming periods but are not ovulating within those cycles, which only becomes apparent when they try to conceive.

Acne and Oily Skin

Elevated androgens (testosterone and DHEAS in particular) stimulate the sebaceous glands to produce excess sebum, clogging pores and creating the conditions for persistent acne. PCOS-related acne tends to be deeper, more cystic, and more resistant to standard topical treatments than ordinary hormonal acne. It typically appears along the jaw, chin, and lower cheeks - the classic "hormonal acne zone" - and often worsens around the time of (irregular) periods.

Hirsutism (Excess Hair Growth)

Unwanted hair growth in areas typical of male hair patterns - upper lip, chin, sideburns, jaw, chest, abdomen, inner thighs - is one of the most emotionally distressing symptoms for many women. It results from the same androgen excess that drives the acne. The severity correlates roughly with androgen levels but is also influenced by the sensitivity of the hair follicles themselves - some women with relatively moderate androgen excess experience significant hirsutism because their follicles are particularly responsive.

Weight Gain and Difficulty Losing Weight

Not all women with PCOS are overweight - the lean PCOS phenotype is well-established and often overlooked. However, the insulin resistance that underlies most PCOS presentations (see below) makes weight management genuinely more challenging. Fat tends to accumulate preferentially in the abdomen, and even modest weight gain in this area worsens insulin resistance and androgen production, creating a self-reinforcing cycle. Many women describe working significantly harder than peers to maintain the same weight, or finding that previously effective weight management strategies stop working.

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Difficulty Conceiving

Because PCOS disrupts or prevents regular ovulation, it is the leading single cause of female infertility. However, it is important to emphasise that PCOS does not mean infertility - most women with PCOS can and do conceive, often with appropriate support and management. Lifestyle changes that improve insulin sensitivity and ovarian function can restore regular ovulation in many women; others require medical assistance ranging from oral ovulation induction agents to more advanced fertility treatments.

Hair Thinning on the Scalp

Counterintuitively, while PCOS drives excess hair growth on the body, it can cause thinning and hair loss on the scalp - a pattern similar to male-pattern baldness, beginning at the crown and widening part. This is called androgenic alopecia and results from androgens shortening the growth phase of scalp hair follicles. It can be one of the most distressing PCOS symptoms and is frequently undertreated.

The Insulin Resistance Connection

Understanding insulin resistance is fundamental to understanding PCOS. Insulin is the hormone produced by the pancreas that allows cells to absorb glucose from the bloodstream. In insulin resistance - which affects somewhere between 65 and 85 percent of women with PCOS, regardless of body weight - the body's cells become less responsive to insulin's signal. The pancreas compensates by producing more and more insulin to achieve the same effect.

High circulating insulin levels directly stimulate the ovaries to produce more androgens (testosterone). These excess androgens interfere with normal follicle development and ovulation, perpetuating the hormonal imbalance. Insulin also reduces levels of sex hormone binding globulin (SHBG), the protein that normally "mops up" excess androgens in the bloodstream - so more free, active testosterone circulates and drives symptoms further.

This is why dietary and lifestyle strategies that improve insulin sensitivity are so central to PCOS management. Reducing the hyperinsulinaemia reduces ovarian androgen production, which then allows the hormonal environment to shift toward normal ovulation.

The Low-GI Diet Approach for PCOS

The glycaemic index (GI) is a measure of how rapidly a food raises blood glucose - and therefore insulin. Low-GI foods produce a slower, gentler rise in blood sugar and a correspondingly lower insulin response, which is exactly what the PCOS-affected system needs. A consistent body of evidence supports low-GI eating as one of the most effective dietary interventions for improving PCOS-related hormonal markers, menstrual regularity, and fertility outcomes. For specific food guidance, see our detailed guide on PCOS friendly foods.

In practical terms, a low-GI approach for Indian women means:

  • Replacing white rice with brown rice, red rice (lal chawal), or millets (jowar, bajra, ragi) which have lower GI values.
  • Choosing whole wheat chapati over maida-based breads or puri.
  • Including protein and fat with every meal - both blunt the glycaemic response of carbohydrates. A dal with ghee, or a sabzi with paneer alongside rice, will produce a significantly lower insulin response than rice alone.
  • Prioritising legumes (rajma, chana, moong, masoor) which have among the lowest GI values of any carbohydrate source and are also high in protein and fibre.
  • Reducing or eliminating sugary drinks, packaged snacks, white bread, maida-based items, and sugar-heavy desserts.
  • Eating regular meals and not skipping breakfast - erratic eating patterns worsen blood sugar regulation and insulin response.

Exercise Recommendations for PCOS

Exercise is a first-line PCOS management tool, not an optional add-on. Physical activity improves insulin sensitivity through multiple mechanisms: it drives glucose into muscle cells independently of insulin, reduces visceral fat (which is itself a source of androgen-producing hormones), and lowers chronic inflammation. The benefits for PCOS symptoms including menstrual regularity, androgens, and mood have been demonstrated in multiple clinical trials.

A combination approach works best. Resistance training - lifting weights, bodyweight exercises, resistance bands - builds muscle mass, which acts as a glucose sink and has lasting effects on insulin sensitivity beyond the workout itself. Aim for two to three sessions per week. Cardiovascular exercise - brisk walking, cycling, swimming, dancing - supports fat loss and cardiovascular health; aim for 150 minutes per week of moderate intensity. Yoga specifically has been studied in the context of PCOS and shows benefits for both hormonal markers and psychological wellbeing - the stress-reducing effects may partly explain this.

The Stress Impact on PCOS

Stress is both underappreciated and under-managed in PCOS. Chronic stress elevates cortisol, which directly stimulates androgen production from the adrenal glands (separate from the ovarian androgen problem). High cortisol also worsens insulin resistance. Women with PCOS already have a dysregulated stress-hormone axis, and psychological stress is documented to worsen both symptom severity and metabolic markers. The relationship is bidirectional - PCOS causes significant psychological distress, and that distress then worsens the condition biologically.

Effective stress management is therefore not a soft recommendation - it is clinical management. Evidence-supported practices for women with PCOS include mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR), yoga, adequate sleep (insufficient sleep directly worsens insulin resistance), social connection, and where necessary, professional psychological support. The rates of anxiety and depression are significantly elevated in PCOS, and these deserve treatment in their own right, not just as secondary concerns.

Medical Options for PCOS Management

Lifestyle changes are foundational and can be transformative, but they are not always sufficient and should not be presented as the only option. Several medical treatments have strong evidence in PCOS management.

Combined oral contraceptive pill (COCP) - regulates periods, reduces androgen levels, and treats acne and hirsutism. It does not treat the underlying insulin resistance and does not preserve fertility.

Metformin - an insulin-sensitising medication originally developed for type 2 diabetes, now widely used in PCOS. It improves insulin resistance, can restore ovulation in some women, and helps with weight management. It is often prescribed alongside lifestyle changes rather than instead of them.

Spironolactone - an anti-androgen medication that reduces acne and hirsutism. It is not suitable during pregnancy.

Inositol supplements - myo-inositol and D-chiro-inositol are naturally occurring compounds that function as insulin sensitisers. A growing body of evidence supports their use in PCOS for improving insulin sensitivity, ovarian function, and androgen levels, with a favourable safety profile. They are widely available over the counter but worth discussing with your doctor before starting.

PCOS is a manageable condition. The women who fare best are those who understand the metabolic mechanisms driving their symptoms, take a consistent approach to diet and lifestyle, and work with informed healthcare providers who view PCOS as the complex endocrine condition it is - not simply a gynaecological inconvenience.

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Tags:PCOSHormonesWomen HealthDietFertility

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Beauty & Blushed Editors

Expert beauty and wellness editors dedicated to empowering women with honest, research-backed advice.

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