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What is Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome | Dr. Allyson Shrikhande | Pelvic Rehabilitation Medicine 2 года назад


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What is Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome | Dr. Allyson Shrikhande | Pelvic Rehabilitation Medicine

Our Chief Medical Officer, Dr. Allyson Shrikhande, tells us what polycystic ovarian syndrome is, the signs, symptoms & causes, and how it can be treated at Pelvic Rehabilitation Medicine. Dr. Shrikhande is the Chief Medical Officer of Pelvic Rehabilitation Medicine. She distilled her global expertise into a minimally invasive, cutting-edge approach to the treatment of pelvic pain and pelvic floor muscle dysfunction. With an extensive background in mainstream clinical medicine, she also makes use of many alternatives, holistic and homeopathic approaches. She has published peer-reviewed articles on the treatment of muscle pain in academic journals and works closely with renowned pelvic pain gynecologists and urologists. At Pelvic Rehabilitation Medicine, our pelvic pain specialists provide a functional, rehab approach to pelvic pain. When you visit one of our offices, you spend an hour with your doctor reviewing in detail your medical history and symptoms. Then, we perform an internal exam (no speculum) to evaluate your nerves and muscles. Together, we'll discuss an individual treatment plan that gets to the root cause of your pain and helps you to feel better. The best part: you can begin treatment the same day! At PRM, our mission is to decrease the time patients are suffering from pelvic pain symptoms. LEARN MORE: https://www.pelvicrehabilitation.com/ JOIN OUR COMMUNITY and get in on the discussions happening: ✨ Facebook -   / pelvicrehabilitation   ✨ Instagram -   / pelvicrehabilitation   ✨ Twitter -   / pelvicrehab   #PelvicRehabilitationMedicine #pcos #pelvichealth #pelvicpain #womenshealth #periodpains #periodproblems #chronicpainwarrior #polycysticovariansyndrome **** Women with polycystic ovarian syndrome have abnormalities in their metabolism of androgens and estrogen. Symptoms of polycystic ovarian syndrome include abnormal menstrual bleeding. It can either be something called oligomenorrhea, where patients within a 12-month span may only have nine periods or less. So, essentially their periods don't come as often. Or it could be something called dysfunctional uterine bleeding, where it could be your menstruation is heavy, or light, or irregular, and sporadic, and often unpredictable. And also. PCOS patients have something called hirsutism, where they could have excessive hair in areas where male patterns are, is very common, as well as acne. Another symptom of polycystic ovarian syndrome is infertility. Surgeries that could potentially cause polycystic ovarian syndrome would be a surgery of the pituitary gland, such as a pituitary adenoma. So, risk factors for polycystic ovarian syndrome include family history, as well as estrogen predominance. Some studies allude to lifestyles such as high stress, potentially, predisposing patients to polycystic ovarian syndrome. So, polycystic ovarian syndrome is diagnosed by a full history and exam as well as basic lab test. And in addition, patients undergo ultrasound of their ovaries, preferably a trans-vaginal ovarian ultrasound, and the combination of those are clinical evidence for polycystic ovarian syndrome. For second-line treatment, there are pharmacotherapy options, including oral birth control, hypoglycemic agents, antiandrogen medications are an option. And sometimes for patients with infertility, fertility medications are an option as well. For surgical options for polycystic ovarian syndrome, the goal is to restore ovulation, particularly for patients with infertility.

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