Polycystic ovary syndrome, ovulation dysfunction, and the metabolic-hormonal pattern that responds to consistent inputs over time.
PCOS is not one thing
The diagnosis is clinical — irregular cycles, signs of androgen excess, and/or polycystic ovaries on imaging — but the underlying pattern varies. Some women with PCOS have prominent insulin resistance and metabolic involvement. Others have predominantly hormonal irregularity without the metabolic features. The protocol that helps depends on which pattern you have.
What’s consistent: PCOS responds to the same inputs that drive fertility outcomes generally — sleep architecture, dietary pattern, stress regulation, targeted supplementation — but the protocol needs to be calibrated to the specific PCOS phenotype. Generic “PCOS diet” advice often produces more cortisol than it removes, especially when it’s restrictive.
PCOS and IVF
Women with PCOS often respond strongly to IVF stimulation — sometimes too strongly, with risk of OHSS. The IVF protocol typically accounts for this. What the IVF protocol doesn’t address is the underlying hormonal-metabolic environment that shaped your cycles in the first place. The 12-week window before retrieval is exactly when those inputs matter most for egg quality and fertilization rates.
What actually helps with PCOS in the pre-IVF window
- Sleep timing. Insulin sensitivity is highest in the morning and degrades through the day. Late bedtimes and irregular sleep worsen insulin resistance, which is a primary driver in metabolic-PCOS.
- Mediterranean dietary pattern. Strong evidence for both PCOS and IVF outcomes. Pattern over food rules. Vegetables, legumes, fish, olive oil, whole grains.
- Inositol. Myo-inositol and D-chiro-inositol have meaningful evidence in PCOS specifically — often more cost-effective than the metformin-style approach for women whose primary pattern is mild metabolic dysfunction. Dosing matters and is worth discussing with your clinician.
- Movement, but not punishing exercise. Insulin sensitivity improves with regular movement; cortisol-raising overtraining undoes the gain. Walking after meals is undervalued.
- Nervous system work. Chronic stress directly worsens androgen excess and ovulation dysfunction. Parasympathetic activation matters here as much as it does anywhere else in fertility.
What we work on together
If you’ve been diagnosed with PCOS and you’re preparing for IVF, the 12-week pre-IVF window is a real opportunity to optimize the inputs that shape both your egg quality and your cycle response. We calibrate the protocol to your specific PCOS pattern — metabolic, hormonal, or mixed — and to how your body responds to changes. No generic PCOS rulebook.
What this is not
This is coaching, not medical care. PCOS diagnosis, monitoring, and any medication management remain with your reproductive endocrinologist or other treating physician. See full disclaimer.
Next step
Book a free 30-minute Pre-IVF Couple Audit. Both partners welcome. We’ll discuss your specific PCOS pattern and the highest-leverage inputs for your situation.