Puberty, Disorders of Development, Menstrual Disorders I & II Flashcards
The corpus luteum produces copious amounts of which hormone?
Progesterone and some estradiol
What does LH vs. FSH stimulate in the ovarian follicle?
- LH stimulates Theca cells to produce androgens (androstenedione and testosterone)
- FSH stimulates Granulosa cells to convert androgens –> estrogens (E1 and E2)
What is responsible for causing atresia of all but 1 follicle during the follicular phase - leading to selection of the dominant follicle; what does the dominant follicle produce?
- ↓ FSH levels progressively cause atresia of all but 1 follicle
- The dominant follicle produces high levels of estradiol
Diagnosis of menopause is made by looking at levels of what?
↑ FSH since ovary is no longer receptive to FSH there is no negative feedback on the anterior pituitary
Which layers of the endometrium remains relatively unchanged during ach cycle and after menstruation provides stem cells for the renewal of the functionalis?
Inner portion or basalis
The endometrial linin?g reaches its maximal thickness during which phase?
Secretory phase
List 3 medications which can impair coagulation and may be associated with heavy bleeding?
- Warfarin
- Aspirin
- Clopidogrel
Define primary amernorrhea.
- No menstruation by 13 y/o WITHOUT secondary sexual development.
OR
- By the age of 15 y/o WITH secondary sexual characteristics
What is the length of most normal menstrual cycles during the first gynecologic year and how does this change as more cycles occur?
- Often irregular in adolescents, most normal cycles range from 21-45 days
- By the 3rd year after menarche, majority of cycles are 21-35 days
What is the mean blood loss per menstrual period; how much loss is associated with anemia and what is a normal and abnormal amount of pad changes per day?
- Mean blood loss is 30cc; changing pads 3-6x per day
- >80cc is assoc. w/ anemia; changin pad q 1-2 hrs is considered excessive
How does obesity vs. a malnourished adolescent affect the onset of puberty?
- Obese children have earlier onset of puberty
- Malnourished, chronically ill w/ weight loss will have later onset
What is the invariant mean weight an adolescent needs to be or above to start menarche?
48 kg (106 lbs.)
Production and differentiation of which adrenal cortex zone are the initial endocrine changes assoc. w/ puberty?
- Adrenal androgen (DHEA, DHEA-S, and androstenedione) production
- Differentiation by the zona reticularis
- Causes growth of axillary and pubic hair (adrenarche or pubarche)
Which hormones are required for thelarche (breast development) vs. pubarche/andrenarche (pubic/axillary hair developement)?
- Thelarche requires estrogen
- Pubarche/adrenarche requires androgens
What are the stages of normal pubertal development from earliest to latest?
- Thelarche
- Adrenarche
- Peak Growth/height velocity
- Menarche
- Mature sexual hair and breasts
*** TAG ME ****
Briefly describe the 5 Tanner stages of breast development.
- Stage 1: preadolescent elevation of papilla only
- Stage 2: breast bud stage; small mound w/ enlargement of areolar region
- Stage 3: more enlargin of breast + areola w/o separation of their contours
- Stage 4: projection of areola and papilla to form secondary mound
- Stage 5: mature stage; projection of papilla only, recession of areola to general contour of breast
Briefly describe the 5 Tanner stages of pubic hair development.
- Stage 1: absence of pubic hair
- Stage 2: sparse hair along labia; hair downy w/ slight pigment
- Stage 3: hair spreads sparsely over jct. of pubes; hair is darker + coarser
- Stage 4: adult-type hair, there is no spread to medial thigh
- Stage 5: spread to medial thighs assuming inverted triangle pattern
Precocious puberty is 5x more likely in which gender?
Girls
What are the 2 major subgroups of precocious puberty?
- Heterosexual: development of secondary sex characteristics opposite those anticipated –> virilizing neoplasms, CAH, exposure to exogenous androgens
- Isosexual: premature sexual maturation that is appropriate for the phenotype of the affected individual
Which test can be administered clinically to diagnose true isosexual precocious puberty; what are you looking for?
- Administration of exogenous GnRH (stimulation test)
- Look for resultant ↑ in LH levels consistent w/ older girls who are undergoing normal puberty
If a CNS disorder is suspected to be the cause of true isosexual precocious puberty, what is used to diagnose?
MRI of head
How is true isosexual precocious puberty treated pharmacologically; what is the important of treating this condition?
- Use a GnRH agonist (leuprolide acetate) —> will suppress release of FSH and LH
- If left untreated <50% of girls will not attain an adult height of 5 feet
Which type of precocity results in increased estrogen levels and causes sexual characteristic maturation without activation of H-P-O axis?
Pseudoisosexual precocity
What is seen in McCune-Albright syndrome (Polyostotic fibrous dysplasia)?
- Multiple cystic bone defects
- Café au lait spots (face, neck, shoulder and back)
- Adrenal hypercortisolism
Which disease is associated with pseudoisosexual precocity due to sex cord tumors that secrete estrogen, GI polyposis, and mucocutaneous pigmentation?
Peutz-Jeghers syndrome