Male reproductive endocrinology Flashcards

1
Q

what are the requirements for normal function

A

gonadal and reproductive system development
intact reproductive hormone production
puberty
spermatogenesis
normal spermatozoa
erectile function
non-obstructive anatomy

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2
Q

what are hormones key for

A

during development of the testicular reproductive system
during puberty and spermatogenesis
during sperm production and erectile function

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3
Q

what key changes occur in foetal life

A

process of sex determination (XY karyotype)
formation of testis (largely independent of hormones)
testosterone is important once testis have formed for activity within them and for masculinisation of the foetus

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4
Q

what controls the development of the male reproductive system

A

under control of the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal (HPG) axis
active during foetal development and lasts until around birth

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5
Q

what is the function of anti-mullerian hormone

A

induces regression of mullerian ducts (oviducts, uterus, vagina)
produced by testicular sertoli cells

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6
Q

what is the function of testosterone in foetal life

A

maintains the male reproductive structures

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7
Q

what occurs during infancy

A

HPG axis is reactivated (lasts ~3-6months)
called ‘mini-puberty’

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8
Q

what is ‘mini-puberty’ important for

A

development of external genitalia
window for investigating reproductive function

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9
Q

what occurs during childhood

A

HPG axis is inactive
no testosterone
no sperm
prepubertal testis do have germ stem cells (sperm), sertoli cells (fertility) and leydig cells (puberty and testosterone)

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10
Q

what occurs during puberty

A

HPG axis is activated
responsible for initiation of spermatogenesis and secondary sex characteristics
normally occurs around 9-14

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11
Q

what is pubertal staging

A

assessment of pubertal development
focuses on development of axillary and pubic hair, development of external genitalia and testicular volumes

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12
Q

when is the GnRH stimulation test used

A

when there are concerns about puberty or delay in testicular function

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13
Q

what occurs throughout adulthood

A

maintenance of secondary sex characteristics and of testosterone production
continuous spermatogenesis and sperm production is the goal
HPG axis is super important for this

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14
Q

what are environmental disorders

A

cryptorchidism (undescended testes)
hypospadias (abnormality of the urethral opening)
infertility
testicular cancer
hypogonadism
collectively known as testicular dysgenesis syndrome

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15
Q

what are genetic disorders

A

ambiguous genitalia
gonadal tumours
hypogonadism
infertility
collectively referred to as disorders of sex development

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16
Q

what is a karyotype used for

A

determine if the patient is an undervirilised XY or a virilised XX, or any other type

17
Q

what is an ultrasound/MRI used for

A

determine what the ambiguous structures are
location (if gonads in inguinal/scrotum region indicates testes, if in abdomen indicated ovaries)
determine what hormones are being produced from the structures
if uterus is absent, indicates testes
can do a laparoscopic surgery for further investigation

18
Q

what is the function of testosterone

A

testosterone activates androgen receptors leading to gonadal descent
5alpha-reductase converts testosterone to dihydrotestosterone (DHT) which leads to development of external genitalia

19
Q

what can abnormalities of hormone pathways lead to

A

all types of disorders, particularly cryptorchidism and ambiguous genitalia

20
Q

how is genetics tested

A

sequence the androgen receptor gene on the X-chromosome,
if mutation is identified in the AR diagnosis is (partial) androgen insensitivity syndrome (PAIS)

21
Q

what are the stages of puberty

A

stage 1 is completely pre-pubertal
stage 5 is normal adult male development

22
Q

what are some final diagnostic tests

A

GnRH stimulation test, also production of LH, FSH and testosterone
scrotal ultrasound - testicular masses, epididymal cysts, varicocele
tumour markers - hCG, AFP, LDH

23
Q

what can cancer treatment as a boy cause

A

chemo and radiotherapy can lead to delayed puberty and eventual hypogonadism
can also cause infertility

24
Q

what can be done for cancer

A

surgery - orchidectomy (removal of a testis)
pathology - seminoma vs non-seminoma
staging of cancer

25
Q

where does the risk of infertility come from in cancer treatment

A

TDS or treatment
can do sperm banking before treatment

26
Q

what is hypogonadotropic hypogonadism

A

decreased LH, FSH and testosterone
something in brain has been affected

27
Q

what are the diagnoses for hypogonadotropic hypogonadism

A

delayed puberty
congenital hypog hypog
brain tumour
radiotherapy
kallmann’s syndrome (if they cant smell)

28
Q

what is the treatment for hypog hypog

A

testosterone and gonadotrophins to induce puberty and fertility

29
Q

what is hypergonadotrophic hypogonadism

A

increased LH and FSH but decreased testosterone

30
Q

what are the diagnoses for hyper hypog

A

Klinefelter syndrome
DSD/gonadal dysgenesis
chemo/radiotherapy