Polycystic Ovarian Disease (PCOD) and Polycystic Ovary Syndrome (PCOS) are not the same condition wearing different names. They are distinct in their causes, their mechanisms, their symptoms, and their long-term implications.
Getting the diagnosis right is the first step toward getting the treatment right and in a country where up to 70% of women with PCOS remain undiagnosed, that first step matters enormously.
If your periods have been irregular for more than three months, if you are experiencing unexplained weight gain, persistent acne, unwanted hair growth, or difficulty conceiving, the answer is not to self-diagnose based on a search engine result.
The answer is to see a specialist who can run the right tests, interpret them in context, and build a care plan around your specific hormonal profile. Learn more about PCOS vs PCOD in the blog below.
What is the Difference Between PCOD vs PCOS?
Walk into any gynaecologist's clinic and you will likely meet at least two or three women that day who have been told they have 'PCOS or PCOD' as though the terms are interchangeable. They are not. The distinction matters for diagnosis, for treatment, for fertility planning, and for long-term health.
The table below is the most detailed reference available for understanding what separates these two conditions across every clinically relevant dimension:
Parameter | PCOD (Polycystic Ovarian Disease) | PCOS (Polycystic Ovary Syndrome) |
Full Form | Polycystic Ovarian Disease | Polycystic Ovary Syndrome |
Nature of Condition | Lifestyle disorder; less severe hormonal imbalance | Systemic endocrine disorder; full-body hormonal disruption |
Prevalence | More common; affects a large proportion of reproductive-age women | Affects 8–13% of women globally; up to 17.4% in Delhi-NCR |
Primary Cause | Immature egg release leading to cyst formation on ovaries | Hormonal imbalance driving excess androgen production and metabolic disruption |
Androgen Levels | Mildly elevated or normal | Significantly elevated (hyperandrogenism) |
Insulin Resistance | Possible but not universal | Present in a majority of cases; drives androgen production further |
Menstrual Irregularity | Irregular or delayed periods; ovulation still occurs | Oligomenorrhoea or amenorrhoea; ovulation often absent |
Ovulation | Preserved in most cases, though irregular | Often absent (anovulation) without treatment |
Ovarian Size | Mildly enlarged with follicular cysts | Significantly enlarged; classic 'necklace sign' of follicles on ultrasound |
Hirsutism (Excess Hair) | Mild or absent | Common; facial and body hair growth (Ferriman-Gallwey positive in ~43% of cases) |
Acne | Mild; often resolves with skincare | Persistent, hormonal acne; typically affects jaw and chin |
Hair Thinning / Alopecia | Possible; usually mild | Male-pattern hair thinning at crown and temples; more pronounced (~28%) |
Weight Gain | Common; often manageable with lifestyle changes | Stubborn abdominal weight gain; linked to insulin resistance |
Metabolic Risk | Low to moderate | High; associated with Type 2 diabetes, dyslipidaemia, and cardiovascular disease |
Mental Health Impact | Mild anxiety or mood changes | Significantly higher rates of anxiety, depression, and body image distress |
Impact on Fertility | Moderate; most women conceive with lifestyle support or mild medication | Pronounced; often requires ovulation induction, IUI, or IVF |
Long-Term Risks | Manageable with lifestyle changes; lower systemic risk | Endometrial cancer, type 2 diabetes, sleep apnoea, cardiovascular disease |
Reversibility | Often manageable; symptoms improve significantly with weight loss and diet | Chronic, lifelong condition; managed but not cured |
Primary Treatment Approach | Lifestyle modification: diet, exercise, stress reduction | Multidisciplinary: hormonal therapy, metformin, fertility treatment, mental health support |
PCOD PCOS Symptoms: What Your Body Is Telling You
One of the most searched questions online is the difference between PCOS and PCOD symptoms and it is worth spending time here, because the overlap in symptoms is precisely what causes the confusion. Both conditions can cause irregular periods, weight gain, acne, and hair changes. The difference lies in intensity, clustering, and the presence of metabolic signs.
Symptoms of PCOD typically include:
- Irregular or delayed menstrual cycles periods may come every 35–60 days or be unpredictable but not absent
- Mild weight gain, particularly around the abdomen and hips
- Mild acne, often around the chin or jawline
- Moderate hair thinning or texture changes
- Occasional bloating, pelvic discomfort
- Slightly elevated testosterone levels, sometimes detectable only on blood tests
- Difficulty conceiving, though most women with PCOD ovulate and can conceive with minimal intervention
PCOD PCOS symptoms overlap significantly, but PCOS tends to present with greater severity and additional metabolic markers:
- Very irregular periods oligomenorrhoea (fewer than 8 periods a year) or amenorrhoea (no periods)
- Pronounced hirsutism excess dark hair on the face, chest, back, and inner thighs
- Persistent, cystic acne resistant to topical treatments
- Alopecia visible thinning at the crown and temples in a male-pattern distribution
- Significant and stubborn weight gain concentrated in the abdomen
- Sleep disturbances, including obstructive sleep apnoea
- Anxiety, depression, low self-esteem documented in significantly higher rates among women with PCOS
- Anovulation (failure to ovulate) leading to infertility without treatment
- Skin changes: acanthosis nigricans (dark, velvety patches at the neck, underarms, or groin), signalling insulin resistance
PCOD or PCOS: Which is More Dangerous for Fertility?
This is the question women ask most and the honest answer is that PCOS carries a more pronounced fertility impact, though neither condition should be dismissed.
In PCOD, ovulation is irregular but not absent. Most women with PCOD still produce and release eggs, even if the timing is unpredictable. Around 20% of women with PCOD in India may need fertility medications to conceive, according to clinical data but the majority can achieve pregnancy with lifestyle modifications alone, including a 5–10% reduction in body weight, which studies show can restore ovulation in many women.
PCOS and fertility present a more complex picture. An ovulation, the complete absence of ovulation is common in PCOS. Without ovulation, conception cannot occur naturally. Treatment typically involves:
- Ovulation induction medications (letrozole or clomiphene citrate)
- Metformin to improve insulin sensitivity and restore hormonal balance
- Intrauterine insemination (IUI) for women who do not respond to oral medications
- In vitro fertilisation (IVF) for more resistant cases or where additional factors are present.
Irregular Periods, Weight Gain, or Acne? Don’t Ignore Hormonal Sign
Seek medical advice early and reduce long-term health risks.
PCOS vs PCOD Diet: Tips to Restore Hormonal Balance
Diet is one of the most powerful tools available for managing both conditions but the specifics differ slightly depending on whether you are managing PCOD or PCOS.
For PCOD
The dietary goal is primarily to reduce inflammation, support healthy weight, and regularise hormonal balance. A diet rich in whole grains, fresh vegetables, lean protein, and healthy fats with reduced processed food, sugar, and refined carbohydrates typically produces significant improvement in symptoms within three to six months.
For PCOS
The stakes are higher because insulin resistance plays a central role. The PCOS vs PCOD diet approach for PCOS is specifically designed to reduce insulin spikes and improve the body's response to insulin. This typically involves:
- A low-glycaemic index (low-GI) diet: Choosing foods that release glucose slowly oats, legumes, non-starchy vegetables, whole grains over foods that cause rapid blood sugar spikes
- Anti-inflammatory foods: Turmeric, fatty fish, berries, leafy greens, and nuts help lower the chronic low-grade inflammation common in PCOS
- Higher protein intake: Improves satiety and reduce androgen levels research suggests protein at every meal supports hormonal regulation
- Limiting dairy and refined carbohydrates, which can elevate insulin and IGF-1 levels
- Inositol supplementation (particularly myo-inositol): clinical evidence supports its role in improving insulin sensitivity and restoring ovulation in PCOS
- Avoiding trans fats and ultra-processed foods, which worsen insulin resistance and inflammation
What Specialist Care for PCOD and PCOS is Available at Artemis Hospitals, Gurugram?
Receiving a diagnosis of PCOD or PCOS can feel overwhelming particularly when the information available online conflates the two, offers conflicting advice, or focuses heavily on fertility to the exclusion of overall wellbeing.
At Artemis Hospitals in Gurugram, the approach to both conditions is grounded in evidence, tailored to the individual, and designed to look beyond symptom management to long-term hormonal health.
The hospital offers:
- Gynaecology and reproductive endocrinology expertise for accurate diagnosis using Rotterdam criteria, hormonal panels, and transvaginal ultrasound
- Dedicated fertility services covering ovulation induction, IUI, and IVF for women whose fertility is affected by PCOS
- Metabolic and diabetes care for managing the insulin resistance, pre-diabetes, and weight management challenges associated with PCOS
- Dermatology support for hormonal acne, hirsutism, and hair thinning
- Mental health services recognising that the psychological burden of both conditions body image concerns, anxiety, fertility stress deserves as much clinical attention as the physical symptoms
- Nutritional counselling for personalised dietary strategies aligned with PCOD or PCOS management goals
Article by Dr. Renu Raina Sehgal
Chairperson - Department of Obstetrics & Gynaecology
Artemis Hospitals