Hypogonadism- Female Flashcards
Define:
Characterised as impairment of ovarian function
Aetiology/risk factors for primary hypogonadism:
Pregnancy = the most common cause of ammenorrhea
o Gonadal dysgenesis (due to chromosomal abnormalities e.g. Turner’s syndrome)
o Gonadal damage (e.g. autoimmune, chemotherapy, radiotherapy)
o Premature ovarian failure: premature pregnancy
o Androgen excess: gonadal or adrenal tumour
Aetiology/risk factors of secondary hypogonadism:
o Functional (e.g. stress, weight loss, excessive exercise, eating disorders) o Pituitary/Hypothalamic Tumours and Infiltrative Lesions (e.g. pituitary adenomas, haemochromatosis) o Hyperprolactinaemia (e.g. due to prolactinoma) o Congenital GnRH deficiency: Kallmann's syndrome, idiopathic o Post pill amenorrhoea: using contraceptive pill for a long time can downregulate the hypothalamus and pituitary even once pill stopped
Epidemiology:
Secondary is more common than primary
Turner’s occurs in 1.5% of pregnancies
Symptoms:
Hot flushes
Vaginal dryness
Oligo/ammenorrhea
Decreased libido
Infertility
Night sweats
Dyspareunia
Turner’s - shorter stature, cubitus valgu and poor breast development
Signs of hypogonadism:
Pre-pubertal:
- Delayed puberty
- Eunuchoid (long legs, arm span greater than height)
Post-pubertal:
- Regression of secondary sexual characteristics (e.g. loss of secondary sexual hair, breast atrophy)
- Perioral and periorbital fine facial wrinkles
Signs of underlying cause
• Hypothalamic/Pituitary disease - visual field defects
• Kallmann’s syndrome - anosmia
If autoimmune then will have other autoimmune conditions
Signs of Turner’s syndrome:
o Short statue o Low posterior hair line o High arched palate o Widely spaced nipples o Wide carrying angle o Short fourth and fifth metacarpals o Congenital lymphoedema
General Investigations:
• Pregnancy test • Low serum oestradiol • Serum FSH/LH o Primary hypogonadism = HIGH o Secondary hypogonadism = LOW • Prolactin • TFTs – can affect menstruation
o Turner’s Syndrome - periodic echocardiography, renal US, chromosomal analysis
o Autoimmune Oophoritis - check autoimmune adrenal insufficiency
Primary hypogonadism investigations:
o Karyotype (look for chromosomal abnormalities) o Pelvic imaging (US or MRI) - performed in primary amenorrhoea to check for structural defects (e.g. androgen insensitivity) • Screen for FMR1 gene in patients with unexplained pre-mature ovarian failure
Secondary hypogonadism investigations:
o Pituitary function tests (e.g. 9 am cortisol, TFTs, prolactin)
o Visual field testing
o Hypothalamic-pituitary MRI
o Smell tests for anosmia
o Serum transferrin saturation (check for haemochromatosis)