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Sedna Hospitals Jammu — Hormonal Disorder Specialists

PCOS and Pituitary Microadenoma: Two Hidden Hormonal Conditions You Should Not Ignore

Irregular periods, hormonal imbalance, or unexplained headaches? Our expert endocrinology team in Jammu diagnoses and treats PCOS and pituitary microadenoma with comprehensive care for patients across J&K.

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in 10 Women Affected by PCOS
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mm — Microadenoma Size Threshold
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% Prolactinomas Respond to Medication
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% Weight Loss Can Restore Periods in PCOS

Introduction: When Your Body Sends Signals You Don't Understand

You've been gaining weight despite eating carefully. Your periods come when they feel like it — or not at all. Your skin breaks out like a teenager's, and no amount of treatment seems to fix it. Or maybe you've been having unexplained headaches, your vision feels slightly off, and your doctor found something small — but significant — on your pituitary MRI.

If any of this sounds familiar, you may be dealing with PCOS, a pituitary microadenoma, or both — two hormonal conditions that are more common than most people realize, yet frequently go undiagnosed for years.

In Jammu, Samba, Kathua, Bari Brahmana, Udhampur, and across Jammu & Kashmir, many patients live with these conditions without a clear diagnosis — managing symptoms in pieces while the underlying hormonal imbalance continues unchecked.

Reviewed and published by the Endocrinology Department, Sedna Hospitals Jammu. Our specialists provide comprehensive hormonal evaluation and evidence-based treatment for patients across J&K.

What Is PCOS (Polycystic Ovary Syndrome)?

Polycystic Ovary Syndrome — commonly known as PCOS — is one of the most prevalent hormonal disorders in women of reproductive age. It affects the ovaries, but its impact extends far beyond reproduction. In PCOS, the ovaries produce higher-than-normal levels of androgens (male hormones), disrupting the menstrual cycle and interfering with ovulation.

PCOS is not just a "period problem." It is a complex metabolic and hormonal condition that affects insulin regulation, body weight, skin health, fertility, and long-term cardiovascular risk.

Three core features define PCOS (Rotterdam Criteria — at least 2 of 3): Irregular or absent menstrual cycles; Elevated androgen levels (hormonal blood tests or physical signs); Polycystic ovaries on ultrasound.

What Is a Pituitary Microadenoma?

A pituitary microadenoma is a small, non-cancerous (benign) tumor of the pituitary gland — the tiny, pea-sized gland located at the base of the brain that controls virtually all your body's hormonal activity. "Micro" means the tumor is less than 10 millimeters in size. Despite its size, a microadenoma can significantly disrupt hormone production.

The most common type is a prolactinoma — a microadenoma that produces excess prolactin, which can suppress ovulation and cause irregular periods, often mimicking or worsening PCOS symptoms.

Other types include: Corticotroph adenomas (producing excess ACTH, leading to Cushing's disease); Somatotroph adenomas (producing excess growth hormone); Non-functioning adenomas (hormonally inactive). Many microadenomas are discovered incidentally during MRI done for headaches or other reasons.

How PCOS and Microadenoma Are Connected

These two conditions can coexist and may even be mistaken for each other. Elevated prolactin from a microadenoma can cause: Irregular periods, Infertility, Milky discharge from the nipples (galactorrhea), and Weight changes — all of which overlap significantly with PCOS symptoms.

This is exactly why a thorough hormonal workup — not just an ultrasound — is essential before reaching a diagnosis. A skilled endocrinologist will test prolactin levels, thyroid function, LH, FSH, testosterone, and order an MRI if prolactin is significantly elevated.

Causes of PCOS

Insulin Resistance

The most significant metabolic driver. High insulin stimulates the ovaries to produce excess androgens, triggering the hormonal cascade that causes PCOS.

Hormonal Imbalance

An imbalance in LH and FSH prevents normal ovulation. Elevated LH relative to FSH is commonly seen in PCOS.

Genetics

PCOS tends to run in families. If your mother or sister has PCOS, your risk is significantly higher. Specific gene variants affecting androgen metabolism appear to be involved.

Chronic Low-Grade Inflammation

Women with PCOS often show markers of low-grade systemic inflammation, which may stimulate the ovaries to produce androgens.

Symptoms of PCOS

Periods fewer than 9 times per year, or complete absence (amenorrhea)
Very heavy, prolonged periods when they do occur
Unwanted facial or body hair (hirsutism) — chin, upper lip, chest, abdomen
Acne that doesn't respond to standard skincare treatments
Male-pattern hair thinning or hair loss on the scalp
Unexplained weight gain, particularly around the abdomen
Darkening of skin in body folds — neck, armpits, groin (acanthosis nigricans)
Difficulty conceiving or recurrent miscarriages
Anxiety, depression, and mood swings — well-documented in PCOS

Symptoms of Pituitary Microadenoma (Prolactinoma)

Irregular or absent periods in women
Milky nipple discharge (galactorrhea) not related to breastfeeding
Persistent headaches — pressure behind eyes or forehead
Visual disturbances — particularly peripheral vision loss
Reduced libido and infertility
In men: reduced testosterone, erectile dysfunction, gynecomastia

How Are These Conditions Diagnosed?

Accurate diagnosis requires a systematic, evidence-based hormonal evaluation — not just a single test.

For PCOS — Blood Tests Hormonal Panel

LH and FSH (and LH:FSH ratio); Total and free testosterone; DHEAS; Prolactin — to rule out a pituitary cause; TSH and T4 — thyroid function; Fasting insulin and glucose — insulin resistance assessment; AMH (Anti-Müllerian Hormone) — elevated in PCOS; Lipid profile and liver function.

Pelvic Ultrasound: Transvaginal ultrasound is the most sensitive method. It assesses ovarian volume and follicle count. Note: having polycystic-appearing ovaries on ultrasound alone does not confirm PCOS — clinical symptoms and blood tests must align.

For Pituitary Microadenoma

Serum prolactin: The key marker for prolactinoma; levels above 150–200 µg/L strongly suggest an adenoma. MRI of the Pituitary Gland: The gold standard for imaging — a dedicated pituitary MRI with contrast can identify adenomas as small as 3–4 mm. Visual Field Testing: Performed when the adenoma is close to the optic chiasm.

Treatment Options

Treating PCOS

Lifestyle Intervention (First Line): Weight loss of even 5–10% of body weight can dramatically improve hormonal balance, restore regular periods, and reduce androgen levels in overweight women with PCOS. Low glycemic index diet, regular aerobic and resistance exercise, sleep optimization, and stress management.

Medications: For menstrual regulation — Combined oral contraceptive pills, Progestin therapy. For insulin resistance — Metformin (reduces insulin resistance, lowers androgen levels). For hirsutism and acne — Anti-androgens (spironolactone, finasteride) under specialist supervision. For fertility — Letrozole (first-line ovulation induction), Clomiphene citrate, Gonadotropin injections, IVF.

Treating Pituitary Microadenoma

Prolactinoma (Most Common): Dopamine agonists — primarily cabergoline and bromocriptine — are the first-line treatment. These medications rapidly lower prolactin levels, reduce tumor size in most patients, restore menstrual function and fertility. Most patients do not need surgery for prolactinoma.

Non-Functioning Adenomas: Watchful waiting with periodic MRI monitoring is appropriate for small, asymptomatic, non-secreting microadenomas. Follow-up imaging is typically done at 6–12 months, then annually.

Surgery (Transsphenoidal): Indicated when tumor does not respond to medication, visual fields are compromised, or CSF leak occurs. Performed via a minimally invasive endonasal approach — no external incision required.

Complications If Left Untreated

PCOS Complications

Type 2 diabetes (insulin resistance progresses); cardiovascular disease; endometrial cancer (from prolonged absent periods); infertility; obstructive sleep apnea; depression and anxiety — 2–3x higher rates; non-alcoholic fatty liver disease.

Microadenoma Complications

Hypopituitarism; vision loss (if adenoma grows to compress the optic chiasm); osteoporosis (from low estrogen due to hyperprolactinemia); infertility; increased cardiovascular risk if growth hormone deficiency develops.

When Should You See a Doctor?

Don't wait until symptoms become severe. Consult an endocrinologist if you notice:

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Periods consistently irregular, very painful, or absent
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Unexplained weight gain around the waist not responding to diet
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Unwanted facial hair, persistent acne, or scalp hair thinning
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Milky nipple discharge when not pregnant or breastfeeding
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Persistent headaches without a clear cause
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Visual changes — blurring or loss of peripheral vision
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Infertility or difficulty conceiving after 6–12 months of trying
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An incidental finding on MRI described as a "pituitary lesion"

Frequently Asked Questions

Can PCOS and a pituitary microadenoma occur together?

Yes. Both conditions can coexist. A pituitary microadenoma — particularly a prolactinoma — raises prolactin levels, which suppresses ovulation and causes irregular periods, overlapping with PCOS symptoms. A complete hormonal workup including a prolactin blood test and pituitary MRI is necessary to distinguish the two.

Can a pituitary microadenoma be cured without surgery?

Yes, in most cases — especially prolactinomas. Dopamine agonist medications like cabergoline effectively normalize prolactin levels and shrink the tumor in the majority of patients. Surgery is reserved for medication-resistant or vision-threatening cases.

Will PCOS go away on its own or after menopause?

PCOS is a lifelong condition, but its symptoms change over time. Menstrual irregularities may improve around perimenopause, but the metabolic risks — including insulin resistance, type 2 diabetes, and cardiovascular disease — persist and require ongoing management.

Does PCOS always cause infertility?

Not necessarily. Many women with PCOS conceive naturally or with minimal medical assistance. However, because PCOS is the most common cause of anovulatory infertility, specialist evaluation is recommended if conception is taking longer than expected.

What blood tests are needed to diagnose PCOS?

A standard PCOS workup includes: LH, FSH, testosterone (total and free), DHEAS, prolactin, TSH, fasting insulin and glucose, AMH (anti-Müllerian hormone), and a lipid profile. Your doctor may add additional tests based on your symptoms.

Get Expert Hormonal Care in Jammu

Sedna Hospitals Jammu provides comprehensive endocrinology services for PCOS and pituitary disorders — serving Jammu, Bari Brahmana, Samba, Kathua, Udhampur, and across J&K.

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