Visual, hidden clues to PCOS aid diagnosis - Hair Removal
Categories: Hair LossAn estimated 10% of American women, including many women with PCOS, remove hair twice a week. Still, hirsutism is frequently detectable if the clinician looks and/or inquires closely enough, at a gynecology symposium sponsored by Symposia Medicus.
“Some women will only mask the hair growth with bleaching or will only remove facial and neck hair and not areas of body hair,” .
Hirsutism may be especially helpful in diagnosing PCOS in women with slender or average body sizes. “Women with PCOS are usually overweight but not always. Slender women with PCOS have a milder form and are probably not at risk for metabolic complications such as diabetes. However, they usually have hirsutism and can benefit from diagnosis and treatment with antiandrogens,”.
The antiandrogens used in the treatment of PCOS include spironolactone, the “most generally useful antiandrogen.”
In patients with PCOS and acne, identifying the patient’s syndrome is necessary to effectively treat the acne. “If you only treat the acne and not the underlying androgenic disorder with antiandrogens, you will not have success with the acne in a patient with PCOS,”.
The hair loss or alopecia associated with PCOS is also often unrecognized. “Androgenic alopecia has a unique pattern in women, compared with men. The hair thinning occurs behind the hairline, with the hairline remaining intact,”