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DISORDERS OF SEX HORMONES IN ONTOGENESIS Carolina Gomes, group 1 Sex determination- ontogenesis • Depends on the SRY- determines if gonads develop into ovaries or testis • Sertoli cells produce anti-Mullerian hormone so the development of Mullerian duct into female genitalia is supressed. Development of Wolffian duct into male genitalia • In ovaries, no Mullerian hormone and no testosterone female genital tract Genetic X phenotype Failed gonadal development • Gonadal dysgenesis: • Congenital development disorder • Loss of germ cells on developing gonads of an embryo • No influence of hormones • Female genitalia • Agonadia: • 46 XY individuals • gonads can’t be detected, abnormal external genitalia and rudimentary Mullerian or Wolffian derivatives • Fetal testes functioned sufficiently long to inhibit Mullerian development • Anorchia: • XY disorder, testes absent in birth • Few weeks of fertilization embryo develops rudimentary testes • If testes fail to develop within 8w baby develop female genitalia • Low testosterone, high FSH and LH, low anti-Mullerian hormone Chromossomal abnormalities • Turner syndrome: 45X • CT strands are formed in place of normal ovaries and external features are more likely to be female. • Klinefelter’s syndrome:47XXY • Testes are formed in a way that spermatogenesis is possible but androgen is impaired. Androgen deficiency leads to an inadequately male appearance. • Trisomy X 45XXX • Woman • Mild effects, microcephaly, tall stature, epicanthal folds, normal fertility • Hermaphroditism • both testes and ovaries are simultaneously formed • Translocation of some parts of Y chromosome, including, SRY gene, onto a X can lead to formation of bisexual gonads and intersexual characteristics • Male pseudohermaphroditism • Intersexual or female sexual characteristics are present • Causes: • A) gonadotropin deficiency, when gonadotropin release is suppressed due to an increase formation of female sexual hormones by a tumor • B) defects in gonadotropin receptors • C) enzyme defects of testosterone synthesis • Female pseudohermaphroditism • Causes: • A) iatrogenic administration • B) increased formation of androgens, in an androgen producing tumor • C) enzymatic defect in adrenocortical hormone synthesis Control of GnRH, FSH and LH in males Control of FSH and LH in female during menstrual cycle Hormonal dysfunction • GnRH in childhood, adolescence and adults • Pulsatile secretion of GnRH • At pituitary, GnRH stimulates the synthesis and secretion of gonadotropins, FSH and LH • These processes are controlled by GnRH pulses and by feedback from androgens and estrogens • Decrease GnRH pulses FSH • Increase GnRH pulses LH • Males GnRH is secreted in pulses at a constant frequency • In Females, the frequency of pulses varies during menstrual cycle and there is an increase in GnRH just before ovulation Androgen Male Precociuous puberty • By tumor or injury of brain that makes sex hormones to occur early Female Precocious pseudopuberty • Induced by sex steroids from adrenal insufficiency Congenital adrenal Hyperplasia • due to poor cortisol ACTH hyperplasia of cells • Deficiency in one hormone leads to increase in another Androgen Male Hypogonadotropic hypogonadism Primary: problem at gonads but not in hypothalamus and pituitary Secondary: acquired, due to head trauma, drugs Estrogen and progesterone THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION! References • SILBERNAGL, Stephan, LANG, Florian, Color Atlas of Pathophysiology, Thieme, 2nd eddition, New York • Arthur C. Guyton & John E. Hall (2011). Mississippi: Textbook of Medical Physiology, (12th Ed.) • DAMJANOV, Ivan, Pathophysiology, Saunders, 2009, Philadelphia