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PCOS Nutritionist Blog


PCOS Has a New Name: What the Change to PMOS Really Means
PCOS has officially been renamed. A new international consensus published in The Lancet, involving more than 50 organisations and input from over 14,000 women worldwide, now recommends the term: PMOS — polyendocrine metabolic ovarian syndrome. For many women, this news may feel surprising, confusing or even frustrating. After all, millions of women have spent years: fighting for their symptoms to be taken seriously finally receiving a PCOS diagnosis learning what the conditio
5 min read


Does Intermittent Fasting Help PCOS? What Women Need to Know About Blood Sugar, Cravings and Energy
Intermittent fasting is often promoted online as a solution for: weight loss insulin resistance inflammation and hormone balance So it is understandable that many women with PCOS wonder whether they should try it too. Some women do report benefits from fasting approaches. But for many others, especially those already struggling with: cravings fatigue stress emotional eating or inconsistent eating patterns fasting can sometimes make symptoms feel worse rather than better. This
4 min read


How Stress Affects Hormones and PCOS: Why Symptoms Often Feel Worse During Stressful Periods
Many women with PCOS notice that symptoms often feel worse during periods of stress. You may recognise patterns like: stronger cravings during busy weeks more fatigue when overwhelmed disrupted sleep during stressful periods worsening skin symptoms before deadlines feeling more emotionally reactive around food irregular cycles after stressful life events This is not “all in your head”. Stress can affect multiple systems involved in PCOS, including: blood sugar regulation appe
4 min read


Fermented Foods, Gut Health and PCOS: Why Digestion May Affect Cravings, Energy and Inflammation
Many women with PCOS struggle with symptoms that seem disconnected at first: bloating cravings fatigue digestive discomfort low energy skin flare-ups irregular appetite patterns But increasingly, research suggests that gut health may play a wider role in overall hormone and metabolic health. This does not mean gut health is the “cause” of PCOS. And it certainly does not mean you need to follow extreme gut-healing protocols. But the gut does influence several systems involved
4 min read


PCOS Supplements Guide: What May Support Cravings, Energy, Hormones and Blood Sugar
If you have PCOS, you have probably searched: “best supplements for PCOS” “natural support for hormones” “supplements for cravings” or “vitamins for PCOS fatigue”. The amount of supplement advice online can feel overwhelming. Many women end up: spending hundreds of pounds on supplements taking large supplement “stacks” trying influencer recommendations or constantly switching products without knowing what is actually helping. Supplements can sometimes play a supportive role i
5 min read


PCOS Anti-Inflammatory Foods: What to Eat to Support Hormone Balance and Reduce Symptoms
If you feel constantly inflamed with PCOS, your diet may be playing a bigger role than you think If you’re dealing with PCOS, inflammation is often part of the picture, even if it hasn’t been clearly explained to you. You might notice: Persistent fatigue Skin flare-ups or acne Bloating or digestive discomfort Stubborn weight gain that doesn’t respond to dieting Irregular cycles Many women I work with feel like their body is “working against them”, despite trying to eat well.
4 min read


Methylation and PCOS: Why This Tiny Cellular Process Matters for Hormones, Fertility and Long-Term Health
Methylation and PCOS – Key Points Methylation is a cellular process that helps regulate hormone balance. Supports fertility by influencing reproductive hormone function. Plays a role in detoxification, energy production, and mood regulation. Can impact long-term health, including inflammation and metabolic function. Nutrition, lifestyle, and targeted support can help optimise methylation for women with PCOS. When you’re dealing with PCOS, it’s easy to focus only on visible sy
5 min read
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