17/05/2026
From PCOS to PMOS :When Medicine Finally Admits Metabolism Was Central All Along
The transition from PCOS, Polycystic O***y Syndrome, to PMOS, Polyendocrine Metabolic Ovarian Syndrome, may sound like a simple terminology update, but in reality it represents something much deeper. It is a quiet acknowledgment that one of the most common conditions affecting women was never simply an ovarian disease. It was metabolic from the very beginning.
For decades, millions of women were taught to see this condition mainly through a reproductive lens. Irregular periods, infertility, ovarian cysts, acne, excess hair growth. Treatments focused heavily on suppressing symptoms with contraceptives, fertility drugs, androgen blockers, and eventually diabetes medications once blood sugar abnormalities appeared later.
But sitting underneath the entire process was the same metabolic dysfunction modern society keeps trying to fragment into isolated diseases.
Insulin resistance. Chronic hyperinsulinemia. Visceral fat accumulation. Energy overload. Inflammation. Blood sugar instability. Mitochondrial stress. Skeletal muscle dysfunction. Sleep disruption. Chronic stress physiology.
The ovaries were often the victim of the metabolic environment, not the origin of it.
And once you see that clearly, you start seeing the same pattern everywhere else in medicine.
Hypertension becomes a pressure problem instead of a metabolic problem. Type 2 diabetes becomes a glucose problem instead of an energy toxicity problem. Fatty liver becomes a liver problem instead of an overflow problem. Erectile dysfunction becomes a pe**le problem instead of a vascular and metabolic problem. Menopause becomes framed as hormone deficiency alone while metabolism, inflammation, muscle loss, circadian disruption, and nervous system stress are often underappreciated.
The body is being divided into specialties while the biology itself remains connected.
And this is where modern medicine must confront an uncomfortable reality.
We have become extraordinarily sophisticated at medicating symptoms while society becomes progressively sicker metabolically.
More medications than ever before. More specialists. More procedures. More technology. More guidelines.
Yet obesity continues rising. Type 2 diabetes continues rising. Fatty liver disease is exploding globally. Infertility is increasing. Depression and anxiety are increasing. Sleep disorders are increasing. Cardiovascular disease remains the leading killer worldwide.
Even healthcare professionals themselves are increasingly suffering from obesity, insulin resistance, hypertension, burnout, fatty liver disease, exhaustion, and metabolic syndrome while working inside the very system designed to create health.
That alone should make society stop and think.
Because perhaps the problem is not simply that patients are failing treatment. Perhaps we have underestimated the power of the biological environment itself.
The human body is not malfunctioning randomly. It is adapting predictably to chronic exposure to ultra-processed food, refined carbohydrates, liquid sugar, protein dilution, muscle inactivity, poor sleep, chronic stress, circadian disruption, and persistent overfeeding.
And medications, while often necessary and sometimes lifesaving, cannot fully reverse an environment that continuously recreates the disease.
Lifestyle is not merely supportive therapy.
Lifestyle is biology.
Nutrition changes hormones. Muscle contraction changes myokines and insulin sensitivity. Sleep changes cortisol and glucose regulation. Resistance training changes mitochondrial density. Sunlight changes circadian signaling. Stress changes inflammatory pathways. Visceral fat changes endocrine signaling. Movement changes vascular health.
These are not alternative ideas. They are core human physiology.
The body responds to the environment it experiences repeatedly.
That is why true restoration often requires changing the terrain itself, not merely suppressing the warning signs emerging from it.
PMOS matters because it cracks open the old model. Once medicine publicly admits that a condition long viewed mainly as reproductive is actually deeply metabolic, the implications become impossible to contain.
Because the same metabolic dysfunction driving PMOS is quietly sitting beneath much of modern chronic disease.
And perhaps future generations will look back and ask one uncomfortable question:
How did we normalize medicating the consequences of metabolic dysfunction for decades while barely addressing the environment creating it?
# # # References
1. Endocrine Society PMOS announcement
2. Reaven GM. Role of insulin resistance in human disease. Diabetes. 1988;37(12):1595–1607.
3. Samuel VT, Shulman GI. Mechanisms for insulin resistance. Cell. 2012;148(5):852–871.
4. Hall KD et al. Ultra-processed diets cause excess calorie intake and weight gain. Cell Metabolism. 2019;30(1):67–77.
5. Hotamisligil GS. Inflammation and metabolic disorders. Nature. 2006;444:860–867.
6. Pedersen BK, Febbraio MA. Muscles, exercise and obesity: skeletal muscle as a secretory organ. Nature Reviews Endocrinology. 2012.
7. Ludwig DS, Ebbeling CB. The carbohydrate-insulin model of obesity. JAMA Internal Medicine. 2018.
8. Virani SS et al. Heart disease and stroke statistics. Circulation. 2021.
9. Romero-Corral A et al. Association of bodyweight with total mortality and cardiovascular events in coronary artery disease. Lancet. 2006.
10. Unwin D et al. Low carbohydrate interventions for remission of metabolic disease. BMJ Nutrition, Prevention & Health. 2020.
Berry Dubiso, MD