You've been dealing with irregular periods, stubborn acne, or unexpected hair growth. Your doctor mentions PCOS, orders an ultrasound, and the results come back showing normal-looking ovaries. No cysts. So how can you have polycystic ovary syndrome without the polycystic ovaries? The confusion isn't just semantic. It reflects how poorly the name captures what's actually happening in your body, and why thousands of people with PCOS go undiagnosed because they're waiting for cysts that may never appear.
Key Takeaways
- The Rotterdam criteria require only two of three features (hyperandrogenism, irregular periods, polycystic ovaries) for diagnosis
- What ultrasound shows are immature follicles, not true cysts
- Four distinct PCOS phenotypes exist with different presentations, including one without cysts and one with regular cycles
What PCOS Actually Means
Polycystic ovary syndrome is a hormonal disorder that affects how your ovaries function. The "polycystic" part of the name refers to the appearance of multiple small follicles on the ovaries during ultrasound, but these aren't actually cysts in the traditional sense. They're immature follicles, fluid-filled sacs that contain eggs that haven't been released during ovulation.
The condition fundamentally involves three potential features: irregular ovulation (which typically causes irregular periods), elevated androgen hormones (like testosterone), and polycystic-appearing ovaries on ultrasound. The critical point is that you only need two of these three features for diagnosis. This means you can have PCOS without cysts if you have the other two criteria, or you can have PCOS with regular periods if you have high androgens and polycystic ovaries.
How PCOS Affects Hormones, Metabolism, and Ovulation
PCOS disrupts the normal hormonal feedback loop between your brain and ovaries. In a typical cycle, follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and luteinizing hormone (LH) coordinate to mature an egg and trigger ovulation. With PCOS, this coordination breaks down.
Androgen excess and its effects
Elevated androgens, which include testosterone and androstenedione, cause the visible symptoms many associate with PCOS: acne, excess facial or body hair (hirsutism), and male-pattern hair thinning. But their effects run deeper. Androgens interfere with normal follicle development, preventing eggs from maturing properly. This creates the characteristic appearance of multiple small follicles arrested in development, the "polycystic" pattern on ultrasound.
Insulin resistance and metabolic dysfunction
When cells don't respond properly to insulin, your pancreas compensates by producing more. These elevated insulin levels have two problematic effects: they signal your ovaries to produce more androgens, and they suppress production of sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG), the protein that normally keeps testosterone in check. The result is more free, active testosterone circulating in your bloodstream. This metabolic component explains why PCOS increases risk for type 2 diabetes and why interventions targeting insulin sensitivity can improve symptoms even when ovarian appearance doesn't change.
Ovulatory dysfunction
The combination of hormonal imbalances prevents normal ovulation in many cases. Without regular ovulation, you don't get the progesterone surge that normally occurs in the second half of your cycle. This creates irregular, unpredictable periods or sometimes no periods at all. However, ovulatory dysfunction exists on a spectrum. Some people with PCOS ovulate occasionally, others ovulate regularly but with hormonal abnormalities, and some don't ovulate at all.
What Drives Different PCOS Presentations
PCOS isn't a single condition but rather a syndrome with multiple underlying drivers. Understanding what's pushing your particular presentation helps explain why you might have some features but not others.
Insulin-driven PCOS
High insulin levels directly stimulate androgen production in the ovaries. You might see elevated fasting glucose, high hemoglobin A1c, or an abnormal triglyceride-glucose index. Weight gain, particularly around the abdomen, often accompanies this phenotype, though lean individuals can also have insulin resistance.
Adrenal androgen excess
In some cases, the adrenal glands, not the ovaries, are the primary source of excess androgens. This typically shows up as elevated DHEA-S on blood work. Chronic stress can drive this pattern, as cortisol and adrenal androgen production are linked. People with adrenal PCOS may have normal ovarian function and regular periods but still experience androgenic symptoms like acne and hirsutism.
Inflammatory PCOS
Chronic low-grade inflammation contributes to PCOS in a subset of cases. Elevated high-sensitivity C-reactive protein or other inflammatory markers may be present. Inflammation can worsen insulin resistance and directly stimulate androgen production, creating a self-reinforcing cycle.
Post-pill PCOS
Some people develop PCOS symptoms after stopping hormonal birth control. The pill suppresses your natural hormone production, and when you stop, the system doesn't always restart smoothly. This phenotype may resolve over time as your natural cycle re-establishes, or it may reveal underlying PCOS that was masked by the contraceptive.
Why PCOS Looks Different in Different People
The Rotterdam criteria create four distinct phenotypes based on which two of the three features you have. This explains why your PCOS might look nothing like your friend's.
Phenotype A: Classic PCOS
This includes all three features: hyperandrogenism, ovulatory dysfunction, and polycystic ovaries. It's the most common presentation and typically involves the most severe metabolic dysfunction. People with this phenotype often have the highest androgen levels and the most pronounced insulin resistance.
Phenotype B: PCOS without cysts
You have hyperandrogenism and irregular periods but normal-appearing ovaries on ultrasound. The absence of polycystic ovaries doesn't make your PCOS any less real or your symptoms any less valid. Your hormonal dysfunction is just as significant, and you face similar long-term health risks.
Phenotype C: Ovulatory PCOS
You have hyperandrogenism and polycystic ovaries but regular menstrual cycles. About 25% of people with PCOS fall into this category. However, the androgenic symptoms like acne, hirsutism, and hair loss can be just as pronounced.
Phenotype D: Non-hyperandrogenic PCOS
You have irregular periods and polycystic ovaries but normal androgen levels. This is the mildest and most controversial phenotype. Some experts question whether it should be classified as PCOS at all, since hyperandrogenism is considered the defining feature by many. However, people with this presentation still experience ovulatory dysfunction and may have metabolic concerns.
Genetic and ethnic variation
Your genetic background influences which phenotype you're likely to develop and how severe your symptoms become. PCOS runs in families, with first-degree relatives having a significantly elevated chance of also having the condition. Certain ethnic groups show different patterns: women of South Asian descent tend to have more severe insulin resistance and metabolic dysfunction, while those of East Asian descent may have milder presentations with less pronounced hyperandrogenism.
Age and reproductive stage
PCOS presentation changes across your lifespan. In adolescence, irregular periods are common even without PCOS, making diagnosis challenging. The updated guidelines recommend waiting at least two years after menarche and requiring both hyperandrogenism and irregular cycles for diagnosis in those under 20. As you age, androgen levels naturally decline, which can make PCOS symptoms less obvious even though the underlying condition persists. After menopause, the focus shifts from reproductive symptoms to metabolic health, as the increased risk for diabetes and cardiovascular disease continues.
From Symptoms to Diagnosis
Diagnosing PCOS without cysts relies heavily on blood work and clinical assessment. The process typically starts with measuring androgens. Total testosterone and free testosterone are the most commonly elevated, though some people show normal total testosterone with elevated free testosterone due to low SHBG. DHEA-S helps distinguish ovarian from adrenal androgen excess.
Metabolic markers provide crucial context. Fasting insulin, glucose, and hemoglobin A1c assess insulin resistance and diabetes risk. The triglyceride-glucose index offers another window into metabolic health. Lipid panels check for the dyslipidemia that often accompanies PCOS.
Tracking these markers over time matters more than any single measurement. PCOS is a chronic condition, and your hormonal and metabolic status will fluctuate. Seeing patterns emerge across multiple tests provides more reliable information than a snapshot. This is particularly true for androgens, which can vary with your menstrual cycle, stress levels, and other factors.
If you're navigating PCOS, Superpower's 100+ biomarker panel can show you exactly where your hormones, metabolism, and inflammatory markers stand, so you're making decisions based on your actual physiology, not assumptions about what PCOS should look like.


.avif)
.avif)

