In this episode they cover why the name polycystic ovarian syndrome has been misleading from the start given that you do not need polycystic ovaries to have the condition and you can have polycystic ovaries without having the condition at all, what the Rotterdam criteria actually are and why having two of three features including irregular periods, elevated androgens, and polycystic ovarian morphology is enough for a diagnosis that covers a wide and sometimes contradictory range of presentations, why a group of international endocrinologists are pushing to rename the condition anovulatory androgen excess to center the diagnosis on the two features that actually matter clinically and remove the ovarian morphology criterion that causes the most confusion, what the four Rotterdam phenotypes look like and why phenotype D which has irregular periods and polycystic ovaries but no elevated androgens is the one the new criteria would exclude from the diagnosis entirely, why some patient advocates are pushing back on the rename out of concern that it erases a community identity that has been built around the PCOS name and what Spencer, Karl, and Dr. Brian think about that tension, how insulin resistance fits into the picture and why it is not part of the diagnostic criteria even though it is present in the majority of patients and drives most of the downstream metabolic risk, why metformin and GLP-1 medicines are doing a lot of heavy lifting for PCOS patients right now and how Dr. Brian approaches treatment decisions in clinical practice, what the data shows on inositol supplementation and why Dr. Brian has more time for it than she does for most supplements in this space, why the androgen piece is so frequently undertreated and how measuring free testosterone versus total testosterone changes what you see in the labs, how birth control fits into the treatment conversation and why it is both overused as a first line fix and genuinely useful when deployed correctly, and what women who have been told they have PCOS should actually be asking their doctor at their next appointment regardless of what the condition ends up being called.
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