Understanding PCOS, Androstenedione, and Amenorrhea in Midlife Women

As the founder of CFP Weight Loss, I've worked with hundreds of women aged 45-54 facing PCOS, elevated androstenedione, and amenorrhea. These often worsen with perimenopause, insulin resistance, and stubborn weight gain. Androstenedione is an androgen precursor; levels above 200-300 ng/dL can drive acne, hair loss, and halted ovulation, leading to absent periods. Many in this group also battle joint pain, diabetes, and high blood pressure, making traditional diets frustrating failures.

Low-carb and ketogenic diets show promise because they lower insulin, which is a key driver of ovarian androgen production in PCOS. Clinical data indicates that dropping carbs below 50g daily can reduce fasting insulin by 30-50% within 8-12 weeks, often improving androstenedione by 15-25%. Yet results vary—some women resume cycles within 3-6 months while others experience prolonged amenorrhea if calories drop too low or stress rises.

My CFP Weight Loss Approach for Hormonal PCOS

In my book and program, we use a modified ketogenic template tailored for midlife metabolism. Start with 20-40g net carbs, prioritize 1.2-1.6g protein per kg ideal body weight, and include healthy fats from avocado, olive oil, and fatty fish. This supports ketosis without crashing thyroid or cortisol. Track cycles, morning basal temperature, and labs every 8 weeks: aim to lower androstenedione, testosterone, and fasting insulin while watching DHEA-S and SHBG.

For joint pain, we emphasize anti-inflammatory foods and gentle movement like walking or resistance bands—no high-impact needed. Many clients lose 15-30 pounds in 90 days, see blood pressure drop 10-15 points, and regain cycles. If amenorrhea persists beyond 4 months, add targeted carbs around workouts (50-75g) or consider inositol 2-4g daily, which improves ovulation in 60-70% of PCOS cases per studies.

Practical Steps and Monitoring for Beginners

Beginners overwhelmed by conflicting advice should focus on three non-negotiables: consistent sleep (7-9 hours), stress reduction via 10-minute breathing, and a simple meal template—eggs with spinach for breakfast, grilled chicken salad for lunch, salmon with broccoli for dinner. Avoid drastic calorie cuts; target 1500-1800 calories based on activity. Insurance rarely covers programs, so our affordable online community provides accountability without gym schedules.

Re-testing androstenedione after 12 weeks often reveals progress even if periods haven't returned. Combine with 2000 IU vitamin D and 400mg magnesium to support hormone balance. Women managing diabetes see A1C improvements of 0.8-1.5 points on this plan. Success comes from consistency, not perfection—many who failed every diet before now maintain 20-40 pound losses long-term.

When to Seek Extra Support

If amenorrhea continues or symptoms worsen, consult your doctor for full hormone panels including LH/FSH ratio, AMH, and prolactin. Some need low-dose medications alongside diet. The CFP method bridges nutrition and medical care, helping you regain control without embarrassment or complexity.