Medically reviewed by Chandre Tina May, Registered Nurse & Menopause Society Certified Practitioner (MSCP). See our editorial policy.

If you were diagnosed with PCOS, chances are the conversation centred on your periods, your fertility, or maybe the hair on your chin. What almost certainly didn’t come up was your heart. And yet PCOS and heart health are far more connected than most women — or even most GPs — are led to believe. If no one has ever sat you down and explained that PCOS raises your cardiovascular risk, you are not alone. It is one of the most under-discussed risks attached to this condition, and it deserves a proper conversation.

This article explains exactly what’s going on, why it matters, and — crucially — what you can do about it right now.

What’s Actually Happening: Your Body’s Security System Gone Haywire

Think of your body’s metabolic and hormonal systems as a sophisticated security system. In most people, the system runs quietly in the background — managing blood sugar, regulating inflammation, keeping blood vessels clear. In PCOS, several alarms in that system are misfiring at once, and the cumulative effect puts extra strain on your heart and blood vessels over time.

Here’s what those misfires look like:

According to the U.S. Office on Women’s Health, women with PCOS are at greater risk of developing type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure, and high cholesterol — all of which feed directly into cardiovascular disease risk. The security system isn’t broken beyond repair, but it does need monitoring and active support.

Why PCOS Raises Cardiovascular Risk Specifically in Women

Heart disease has long been thought of as a “man’s problem.” The reality is that cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death in women worldwide — and PCOS is one of the female-specific factors that raises that risk earlier in life than it would otherwise appear.

Women with PCOS tend to accumulate cardiovascular risk factors — insulin resistance, abdominal weight, inflammation, blood pressure changes — in combination and from a younger age. This clustering effect matters. Any single factor might be manageable on its own; together, they accelerate the risk trajectory significantly.

It’s also worth knowing that PCOS doesn’t stop at menopause. The hormonal landscape shifts when periods end, but insulin resistance, metabolic dysfunction, and cardiovascular risk factors often persist. The women most vulnerable are those who reach midlife without having had PCOS properly managed in their earlier decades. You can read more about how PCOS interacts with hormonal change across life stages in our piece on PCOS and metabolic health across the lifespan.

What This Feels Like — and Why It’s So Easy to Miss

Here’s the insidious thing about cardiovascular risk in PCOS: most of it is invisible until it isn’t. There’s no reliable symptom that flags “your arteries are under strain.” You can feel completely well — managing your periods, living your life — while insulin resistance is quietly doing damage in the background.

Some women notice clues: fatigue that seems disproportionate to their activity levels, difficulty losing weight despite real effort, or persistent brain fog. These can all be downstream effects of insulin resistance. But many women feel entirely fine, which is exactly why regular screening matters so much. If you’ve been experiencing these kinds of symptoms alongside your PCOS, our article on PCOS, fatigue, and insulin resistance goes deeper on the connection.

What Actually Helps: Evidence-Based Options

Lifestyle approaches (with the strongest evidence)

Non-hormonal medical options

Hormonal options

For a broader overview of managing PCOS holistically, see our guide to PCOS treatment options and what the evidence says.

When to See a Doctor

If you have a PCOS diagnosis and have never had a cardiovascular risk review, that conversation is overdue. Ask your GP or specialist about:

You should also seek prompt medical attention if you experience chest pain, unexplained breathlessness, palpitations, or sudden dizziness. These symptoms always warrant evaluation, regardless of PCOS.

The Menopause Society notes that women with PCOS deserve long-term metabolic monitoring — not just reproductive management in their twenties and thirties. If your healthcare provider hasn’t initiated this conversation, it’s entirely reasonable to raise it yourself.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does PCOS directly cause heart disease?

PCOS significantly raises the risk of cardiovascular disease by clustering risk factors — insulin resistance, inflammation, high blood pressure, and unfavourable cholesterol — but it doesn’t make heart disease inevitable. Identifying and actively managing those risk factors can substantially reduce your long-term risk.

Can I reduce my cardiovascular risk if I already have PCOS?

Yes, and meaningfully so. Regular exercise, an anti-inflammatory diet, and appropriate medical management of blood sugar, blood pressure, and cholesterol all have strong evidence behind them. Early intervention matters — the sooner you address the underlying metabolic imbalances, the better the long-term picture.

Do I need heart tests if I feel fine?

Yes. Most cardiovascular risk factors in PCOS are silent — you won’t feel insulin resistance or mildly raised cholesterol. Routine screening (glucose, lipids, blood pressure) is recommended for all women with PCOS, regardless of how they feel. Ask your GP to initiate this if it hasn’t happened.

Does the risk go away after menopause?

Unfortunately, no. While hormone patterns shift at menopause, the underlying metabolic dysfunction associated with PCOS often persists. Some research suggests the cardiovascular risk gap between women with and without PCOS continues into postmenopause, which is why ongoing monitoring matters throughout life.

Is weight the main driver of heart risk in PCOS?

Weight is one factor, but not the whole picture. Women with a healthy body weight can still have significant insulin resistance, inflammation, and cardiovascular risk if they have PCOS. Managing metabolic health — not just the number on the scale — is what matters most.

This article is for general information and is not medical advice. It was reviewed by a certified healthcare professional in line with our editorial policy, and we update our content as the science evolves — but every woman’s body is different, so please speak to a qualified healthcare professional about your own symptoms.

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