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String of Pearls PCOS: What It Means on Ultrasound
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String of Pearls PCOS: What It Means on Ultrasound

String of Pearls PCOS: What It Means on Ultrasound

An explanation of what the string of pearls pattern on ultrasound means, how it relates to PCOS diagnosis, and what the imaging actually reveals.

March 4, 2026
Author
Superpower Science Team
Creative
Jarvis Wang
Close-up of a flower center with delicate pink petals and water droplets.

Your ultrasound report mentions a string of pearls pattern and you're not sure what that means. It sounds alarming, but it's actually a specific arrangement of follicles that doctors look for when evaluating PCOS. Understanding what the pattern does and doesn't tell you can save you unnecessary worry.

Key Takeaways

  • The string of pearls pattern shows multiple small follicles (the current diagnostic threshold is 20 or more per ovary) arranged around the ovary's outer edge, representing immature follicles that stalled during development due to hormonal imbalance.
  • Polycystic ovary morphology on ultrasound is one of three criteria used to diagnose PCOS, reflecting disrupted ovulation rather than a structural defect.
  • Ovarian volume and stromal echogenicity provide additional diagnostic information beyond follicle count.
  • Not everyone with polycystic ovaries on ultrasound has PCOS or requires treatment.

What the String of Pearls Pattern Actually Shows

The string of pearls appearance describes multiple small follicles, each measuring 2 to 9 millimeters in diameter, arranged in a peripheral ring around the ovary's outer cortex. On a transvaginal ultrasound, these follicles appear as small, dark (anechoic) circles because they're fluid-filled sacs. The pattern earned its name because the follicles line up like beads on a necklace when viewed in cross-section.

These are not cysts. They're antral follicles, the same structures that develop each month during a normal menstrual cycle. In a typical ovulatory cycle, one follicle matures and releases an egg while the others regress. In PCOS, hormonal imbalances prevent any single follicle from reaching full maturity. Instead, multiple follicles begin developing but arrest at an early stage, accumulating around the ovary's periphery. The result is a higher-than-normal follicle count, typically 20 or more per ovary when using high-resolution transvaginal ultrasound.

The Rotterdam criteria, established in 2003 and updated in 2018, define polycystic ovary morphology as either 20 or more follicles per ovary or an ovarian volume greater than 10 cubic centimeters. The follicle count threshold was raised from 12 to 20 as ultrasound technology improved, allowing clinicians to visualize smaller structures more accurately.

How PCOS Disrupts Follicle Development and Ovarian Structure

The string of pearls pattern reflects what happens when the hormonal signals that regulate ovulation go awry. In PCOS, elevated insulin and luteinizing hormone (LH) levels, combined with relative deficiency of follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), create an environment where follicles start to mature but never finish the process.

Hormonal disruption at the follicular level

Insulin resistance, present in up to 70% of people with PCOS, drives excess androgen production by ovarian theca cells. These androgens interfere with normal follicle maturation. High LH levels further stimulate androgen synthesis, while insufficient FSH means no single follicle receives the signal to become dominant and ovulate. The result is a cohort of small, arrested follicles that persist cycle after cycle.

Ovarian stromal changes

Beyond the follicles themselves, the ovarian stroma (the supportive tissue between follicles) becomes hyperechoic on ultrasound, meaning it appears brighter than normal. This increased echogenicity reflects stromal hypertrophy and increased vascularity driven by chronic androgen exposure. The stroma-to-total ovarian area ratio correlates with biochemical hyperandrogenism, making it a useful secondary marker when evaluating PCOS severity.

Ovarian volume expansion

Polycystic ovaries are often enlarged, with volumes exceeding 10 cubic centimeters. This expansion results from both the accumulation of multiple follicles and stromal thickening. Ovarian volume alone can meet diagnostic criteria for polycystic ovary morphology even when follicle count is borderline, though the two findings typically occur together.

What Drives the String of Pearls Pattern

Insulin resistance and hyperinsulinemia

Elevated insulin levels amplify LH-driven androgen production in the ovaries. Insulin also suppresses sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG) production in the liver, increasing free testosterone levels in circulation. This creates a feedback loop where high androgens further impair insulin sensitivity, perpetuating both metabolic dysfunction and ovulatory disruption.

Elevated LH-to-FSH ratio

In PCOS, the pituitary gland secretes LH at higher-than-normal levels relative to FSH. This skewed ratio favors androgen synthesis over estrogen production and prevents any single follicle from achieving dominance. Without a dominant follicle, ovulation doesn't occur, and the arrested follicles remain visible on ultrasound.

Chronic anovulation

When ovulation fails to occur regularly, the ovaries don't undergo the normal cyclical changes that clear out immature follicles. Instead, these follicles persist, creating the characteristic polycystic appearance. The longer anovulation continues, the more pronounced the ultrasound findings become.

Genetic and epigenetic factors

PCOS has a strong hereditary component. Variants in genes regulating insulin signaling, androgen synthesis, and gonadotropin receptor function increase susceptibility to the condition. Environmental factors, including diet, stress, and endocrine-disrupting chemical exposure, can modify gene expression and influence whether someone with genetic predisposition develops the full syndrome.

Why the Same Ultrasound Findings Look Different Across Individuals

Polycystic ovary morphology without PCOS

Up to 20 to 30% of reproductive-age individuals with regular ovulatory cycles have polycystic ovaries on ultrasound but no other features of PCOS. These individuals may have a higher baseline follicle count due to genetic variation in ovarian reserve or may represent a milder phenotype that doesn't progress to full syndrome. Polycystic ovary morphology alone, without hyperandrogenism or ovulatory dysfunction, doesn't warrant a PCOS diagnosis or treatment.

Age-related changes in ovarian morphology

Follicle count and ovarian volume decline with age. The threshold for defining polycystic ovaries may need adjustment in individuals over 30, as normal age-related follicle depletion can mask the polycystic pattern. Conversely, younger individuals may show more pronounced ultrasound findings even with milder hormonal abnormalities.

Body composition and metabolic phenotype

Insulin resistance severity varies widely among people with PCOS. Those with higher body mass index and central adiposity tend to have more severe metabolic dysfunction, which amplifies ovarian androgen production and may correlate with more pronounced ultrasound findings. However, lean individuals with PCOS can also display the string of pearls pattern, driven more by primary ovarian dysfunction than by insulin resistance.

PCOS phenotype variation

The Rotterdam criteria recognize four PCOS phenotypes based on which two of three criteria are present: hyperandrogenism, ovulatory dysfunction, and polycystic ovary morphology. Individuals with hyperandrogenism and anovulation but normal-appearing ovaries still have PCOS. Conversely, those with polycystic ovaries and irregular cycles but no clinical or biochemical hyperandrogenism represent a milder phenotype with different metabolic risk profiles.

Connecting Ultrasound Findings to Metabolic and Hormonal Data

The string of pearls pattern on ultrasound is one piece of diagnostic information. It becomes clinically meaningful when interpreted alongside hormonal and metabolic markers that reveal the underlying drivers of ovarian dysfunction.

Testosterone and free androgen index quantify hyperandrogenism, while LH and FSH levels reveal the gonadotropin imbalance driving follicular arrest. Fasting insulin and glucose assess insulin resistance, while hemoglobin A1c tracks longer-term glycemic control. Anti-Müllerian hormone (AMH), secreted by small antral follicles, is often elevated in PCOS and correlates with follicle count on ultrasound.

Lipid panels, including triglycerides and HDL cholesterol, help assess cardiovascular risk, which is elevated in PCOS due to chronic inflammation and metabolic dysfunction. High-sensitivity C-reactive protein (hs-CRP) provides a marker of systemic inflammation. Tracking these biomarkers over time reveals whether interventions are improving the metabolic environment that drives ovarian dysfunction, even before ultrasound findings normalize.

Directional trends matter more than single measurements. A declining AMH level, improving insulin sensitivity, or normalizing LH-to-FSH ratio suggests that the hormonal imbalances perpetuating the string of pearls pattern are resolving, even if the ultrasound appearance lags behind.

How Superpower Helps You Track the Full Picture

Understanding what's happening at the hormonal and metabolic level gives you more control than an ultrasound image alone. Superpower's 100+ biomarker panel measures testosterone, insulin, glucose, AMH, LH, FSH, lipids, and inflammatory markers in a single draw, so you can see how the drivers of ovarian dysfunction are shifting over time. Tracking these markers alongside ultrasound findings helps you and your clinician make informed decisions about interventions, whether that's lifestyle modification, metabolic support, or hormonal therapy.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does the string of pearls pattern mean I have PCOS?

Not necessarily. The string of pearls pattern indicates polycystic ovary morphology, which is one of three criteria used to diagnose PCOS. You need at least two of the following: polycystic ovaries on ultrasound, irregular or absent ovulation, and clinical or biochemical signs of hyperandrogenism. If you have polycystic ovaries but regular cycles and normal androgen levels, you don't meet criteria for PCOS.

Can the string of pearls pattern go away?

Yes, though it may take time. Improving insulin sensitivity, reducing androgen levels, and restoring regular ovulation can allow arrested follicles to regress and ovarian morphology to normalize. Lifestyle interventions, metabolic medications, and hormonal treatments can all contribute to this process, but ultrasound changes typically lag behind hormonal and metabolic improvements by several months.

How accurate is ultrasound for diagnosing PCOS?

Transvaginal ultrasound with high-resolution transducers (8 MHz or higher) is highly accurate for identifying polycystic ovary morphology. However, ultrasound alone cannot diagnose PCOS. It must be interpreted alongside clinical history, menstrual patterns, and hormonal testing. Transabdominal ultrasound is less sensitive and may miss subtle findings, so transvaginal imaging is preferred when feasible.

What's the difference between polycystic ovaries and ovarian cysts?

Polycystic ovaries contain multiple small follicles (2 to 9 mm) that represent arrested follicle development. Ovarian cysts are larger fluid-filled structures, typically over 3 centimeters, that can develop for various reasons including functional cysts, endometriomas, or cystadenomas. The "cysts" in polycystic ovary syndrome are a misnomer; they're actually immature follicles, not true cysts.

Can I have PCOS without the string of pearls pattern on ultrasound?

Yes. The Rotterdam criteria allow for a PCOS diagnosis based on hyperandrogenism and ovulatory dysfunction alone, even if ovarian morphology appears normal on ultrasound. This phenotype is less common but still represents PCOS and carries similar metabolic risks. Conversely, some individuals with polycystic ovaries on ultrasound don't have PCOS if they lack the other diagnostic criteria.

Does ovarian volume matter as much as follicle count?

Both are important. An ovarian volume greater than 10 cubic centimeters can meet criteria for polycystic ovary morphology even if follicle count is borderline. Ovarian volume reflects both follicle accumulation and stromal hypertrophy, making it a useful complementary measure. However, follicle number per ovary (20 or more) is considered the most specific ultrasound finding for PCOS when using modern high-resolution imaging.

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Close-up of a flower center with delicate pink petals and water droplets.
Close-up of a flower center with delicate pink petals and water droplets.
Close-up of a flower center with delicate pink petals and water droplets.
Close-up of a flower center with delicate pink petals and water droplets.
Close-up of a flower center with delicate pink petals and water droplets.
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