Your care

Preparing for your PCOS doctor visit: labs, questions and records

M
PMOSly Editorial
Medically reviewed for accuracy
Updated Jul 20267 min read
Informational, not medical advice. This article helps you understand and track patterns. It doesn't diagnose or treat any condition — always consult your doctor about your health.

PCOS care often involves several clinicians — a GP, a gynecologist, sometimes an endocrinologist or dermatologist — and each asks for a slightly different slice of your history. Walking in prepared makes appointments shorter, calmer and far more useful. This guide helps you get ready; it doesn't replace your clinician's advice, and PMOSly's role is simply to help you bring a clear, accurate record.

Why preparation pays off

Appointments are short. If the first ten minutes go to reconstructing when your last period was or which supplement you tried, there's less time for the actual plan. A tidy record flips that: your clinician sees the pattern instantly and spends the visit on decisions, not detective work.

The records worth bringing

  • Cycle history — period start dates over the last several months, plus your average and longest gap.
  • Symptom trends — how acne, hair changes, weight, energy or mood have moved over time.
  • Medications and supplements — what you take, the dose, and when you started.
  • Previous labs — so trends are visible, not just single snapshots.
  • Your top concerns — written down, so the important question doesn't get forgotten.

A doctor-ready PDF export — like the one PMOSly generates on your device — puts all of this on a page or two, so nothing gets lost.

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Labs that commonly come up

Every case is different, and your clinician decides what's appropriate, but these often feature in PCOS work-ups:

Hormones

Total and free testosterone, SHBG, sometimes LH and FSH, and AMH. These help assess androgens and ovulation.

Metabolic markers

Fasting glucose, fasting insulin, HbA1c, and sometimes a glucose tolerance test and a lipid panel — because PCOS is closely tied to metabolic health.

Ruling things out

Thyroid function and prolactin are often checked, since other conditions can mimic PCOS symptoms.

Keeping these results over time — with their reference ranges — lets you and your doctor see the direction of travel, not just one day's number.

"The most valuable thing you can bring isn't a theory about your diagnosis — it's clean, honest data. Let the trends speak, and let your clinician interpret them."

Questions to ask

  • Based on my history and labs, what does my picture suggest — and what's uncertain?
  • Which symptoms should we prioritise first?
  • Are there metabolic risks I should be monitoring, and how often?
  • What are my options — lifestyle, medication, referral — and what's the evidence for each?
  • What change would tell us it's working, and when should I come back?

After the appointment

Note down what was decided and any new medication or lab that was ordered, then keep tracking. When you return, your updated record shows whether things moved — the single most useful thing for the next conversation. Remember that any insight from an app is informational: it helps you and your doctor see patterns, but it doesn't diagnose, predict or treat.

Sources

  1. American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG). Polycystic Ovary Syndrome (PCOS) — FAQ.
  2. Endocrine Society. Diagnosis and Treatment of Polycystic Ovary Syndrome — clinical practice guideline.
  3. Teede HJ, et al. International evidence-based guideline for the assessment and management of polycystic ovary syndrome (2023).
  4. NHS. Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) — Diagnosis.

Related articles

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PCOS symptoms and how to track them (a practical guide)

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PCOS and insulin resistance: the metabolic link, explained

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Cycle

Irregular cycles with PCOS: what’s normal and how to log them

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