Endocrine infertility Flashcards

1
Q

What is infertility?

How often does it occur?

A

Inability to concieve after one year of regular unprotected sex

It occurs in 1:6 couples

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2
Q

Where are the causes for infertitlity?

A

Caused by abnormalities

  • in males (30%)
  • or females (45%)
  • or unknown (25%)

—> Need to see whole couple for determining infertility

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3
Q

What are the clinical features of male hypogonadism?

A

All due to low Testosterone:

  • loss of libido
  • small testis
  • loss of muscle bulk
  • impotence
  • osteoporosis
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4
Q

What are the causes for male hypogonadism?

A
  1. Hypothalamic/Pituitary reasons
    • Hypopituitarism
    • Kallmanns syndrome
    • Illness/underweight (leptin effect on pituitary)
  2. Primary gonodal disease
    • genetic (e.g. Kleinfeltery syndrome XXY)
    • Aquired: testicular torison, Chemotherapy
  3. Hyperprolactinaemia
  4. Androgen receptor deficienyy
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5
Q

What is Kallmanns syndrome?

A

A syndrome that results in lowGnRH pressenting with

  • loss of smell (anosmia)
  • in males: no descend of testis + late puberty
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6
Q

Which investigatios would you perform when someone presents with symptoms of male hypogonadism?

A

Hormone levels

  • LH, FSH high (lack of negative feedback)
  • Testosterone low

Prolactin levesl

Sperm count

Chromosomal analysis (e.g. Kleinfelters XXY)

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7
Q

What is Azoospermia?

A

Absence of sperm in ejaculate

(How would you call)

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8
Q

Oligospermia

A

Reduced numbers of sperm in ejaculate

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9
Q

Absence of sperm in ejaculate

(How would you call)

A

What is Azoospermia?

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10
Q

What is

Reduced numbers of sperm in ejaculate

A

Oligospermia

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11
Q

How would you treat a male patient with Hypogonadism?

A
  1. Testosterone replacement for all patients
  2. When wish for fertility: also FSH + LH replacement required
  3. In Hyperprolactinaemia: Dopamine agonist
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12
Q

What are the possible sites for androgen production?

A
  • Adrenals
  • Testicles (Leydig cells)
  • Ovaries
  • placenta
  • tumors
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13
Q

What are the main physiological actions of Testosterone?

A
  • Development of male genitalia tract
  • Maintains fertility in adulthood
  • Control of 2nd sexual characteristics
  • Anabolic effects: Muscle and Bone
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14
Q

Which pathways can testosterone undergo?

What are the enymes involved?

What are possible products?

A

Testosterone into

Dihydrotestosterone (via 5-alpha reductase) or

17ßEstradiol (Via Aromatase)

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15
Q

What are the effect of testosterone treatment in adulthood?

A

It will increase

  • lean body mass
  • muscle size and strength
  • bone formation + bone mass (in young men)
  • libido and potency (but for restoring fertility also LH + FSH are needed!)
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16
Q

What is oligomenorrhoea?

A

Prolonged, irregular periods

17
Q

What are possible causes of Amenorrhoea?

A
  1. Pregnancy/ Lactation
  2. Ovarian failure
    • premature ovarian failure
    • Ovariectomy / chemotherapy
    • ovarian dysgenesis (Turners 45 XO) – lacking one chromosome
  3. Gonadotrophin failure:
    • Hypo / pit disease
    • Kallmann’s syndrome (anosmia, Low GnRH)
    • Low BMI (Leptin inhibition of GnRH release)
    • Post pill amenorrhoea (exogenous hormone switches off hypothalamus)
  4. Hyperprolactinaemia
  5. Androgen excess: gonadal tumour
18
Q

Which investigations would you perform on someone presenting with amenorrhoea?

A
  1. Pregnancy test
  2. Hormonal profile
    • LH, FSH, oestradiol
    • Day 21 progesterone
    • Prolactin, thyroid function tests
    • Androgens (testosterone, androstenedione, DHEAS)
  3. Chromosomal analysis (Turners 45 XO)
  4. Ultrasound scan ovaries / uterus
19
Q

How would you treat somoen with amenorrhoea?

A

Treat the cause (eg low weight)!

Also treatment in dependant on the cause:

In Primary ovarian failure

  • infertile, HRT

In Hypothalamic / pituitary disease

  • HRT for oestrogen replacement
  • If Fertility wanted: Gonadotrophins (LH & FSH) – part of IVF treatment
20
Q

What is PCOS?

How often does it occur?

A

Polycystic ovarian syndrome

•Incidence: 1 in 12 women of reproductive age

21
Q

How do you diagnose polycystic ovarian syndrome?

A

For a diagnosis: two of the following features are required:

  • polycystic ovaries on USS
  • oligo- / anovulation
  • clinical / biochemical androgen excess
22
Q

What is the relationship between PCOS and risk of CVS disease and diabetis

A

PCOS are associated with increased risk in diabetis and CVS disease

23
Q

What are the clinical features of PCOS?

A
  • Hirsuitism
  • Menstrual cycle disturbance
  • Increased BMI
24
Q

How would you treat PCOS?

A

Metformin

  • decreased testosterone production

Clomiphene

  • Is anti-oestrogenic in the hypothalamo-pituitary axis
  • –> blocks negative feedback thereby increaseing GnRH levels + levels of gonadotrophins

Gonadotrophin therapy as part of IVF treatment

25
What is Clomiphene? What is it used for?
Is anti-oestrogenic in the hypothalamo-pituitary axis --\> blocks negative feedback thereby increaseing GnRH levels + levels of gonadotrophins
26
Explain the (off-label) use of Metformin in PCOS
It probably reduces androgen production
27
What are the causes for Hyperprolactinaemia?
1. Dopamine antagonist drugs * Anti-emetics (metoclopramide) * Anti-psychotics (phenothiazines) 2. Prolactinoma 3. Stalk compression due to pituitary adenoma 4. PCOS 5. Hypothyroidism 6. Oestrogens (OCP), pregnancy, lactation, Idiopathic
28
Explain the role of the Thyroid in fertiltiy
Hypothyroidism might be a cause of infertility because * Low T3/T4 --\> no -ve feedback--\> * **high TSH** levels * TSH has a **stimmulating effect of prolactin** release * Prolactine has a **inhibitory effect on GnRH** and LH/FSH
29
What are the clinical features of somone with a hyperprolactinaemia?
Galactorrhoea Reduced GnRH secretion / LH action \>\> hypogonadism In a Prolactinoma: * Headache * Visual field defect
30
How would you treat someone with hyperprolactinaemia?
**Treat the cause** – stop drugs Dopamine agonist * Bromocriptine * Cabergoline Prolactinoma * Dopamine agonist therapy (-ve feedback) * Pituitary surgery rarely needed
31
Explain the production of female sex hormones and controll in the Hypothalamo/Pit Axis
32
What are the expected hormonal changes with PCOS?
* increase in androgens * increase in LH * (reduction in FSH)