Reproductive: Male hypogonadism Flashcards

1
Q

Male hypogonadism

A

Clinical syndrome comprising of signs, symptoms and biochemical evidence of testosterone deficiency

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2
Q

Male: HPG axis (4)

A

Hypothalamus is stimulated by kisspeptin to release pulses of GnRH

Anterior pituitary is stimulated by GnRH to release LH and FSH

Gonad (testes) are stimulated by LH and FSH to produce testosterone

Testosterone provides negative feedback to hypothalamus and pituitary

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3
Q

Testosterone Production (3)

A

Produced by Lydia Cells under control of LH

Majority is bound by SHBG and albumin

Converted to dihydrotestosterone (highly active form) and oestradiol

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4
Q

primary male hypogonadism

A

Testes

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5
Q

Secondary male hypogonadism

A

Hypothalamus or anterior pituitary

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6
Q

Primary Hypogonadism Mechanism

A

Testes primarily affected

Decreased testosterone results in decreased negative feedback

Anterior pituitary secretes higher amounts of LH and FSH

Hypergonadotrophic hypogonadism

Spermatogenesis affected more than testosterone production

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7
Q

Primary Hypogonadism Aetiology

A

Congenital

  • Klinefelter’s Syndrome
  • Crytorchidism
  • Y-chromosome micro deletions

Acquired

  • testicular torsion/ trauma
  • chemotherapy/ radiation
  • Varicocele
  • Orchitis (mumps infection)
  • Infiltrative diseases
  • Medications (glucocorticoids, ketoconazole)
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8
Q

Klinefelters Syndrome

A

Most common genetic cause of hypogonadism

Caused by nondisjunction (normally 47 XXY)

Presentation variable

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9
Q

Klinefelters diagnosis

A

Diagnosed by karyotyping

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10
Q

Klinefelters Clinical Features

A

Affected men are infertile (due to tubular damage)

Small, firm testes

Increased incidence of cryptorchidism, learning disability and psychosocial issues

increased risk of breast cancer and non-Hodgkins lymphoma

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11
Q

Secondary hypogonadism

A

Hypothalamus/ pituitary affected
Testes capable of normal function

LH/FSH low despite low testosterone

Hypogonadotrophic hypogonadism

Spermatogenesis and testosterone production equally affected

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12
Q

Secondary hypogonadism aetiology

A

Congenital

  • Kallmanns Syndrome
  • Prader-Willi syndrome

Acquired

  • Pituitary damage (tumours, infiltrative disease, infection, apoplexy, trauma)
  • Hyperprolactinaemia
  • obesity, diabetes
  • medications (steroids, opiates)
  • acute systemic illness
  • eating disorders, excessive exercise
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13
Q

Kallmann Syndrome

A

Genetic disorder characterised by isolated GnRH deficiency and hyposmia or anosmia

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14
Q

Kallmann Syndrome associated abnormalities

A

Unilateral renal agenesis
Red-green colour blindness
Cleft lip/palate
Bimanual sykinesis

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15
Q

Hypogonadism Features: Pre-pubertal onset

A
Small male sex organs 
Decreased body hair 
High pitched voice
Low libido 
Gynaecomastia 
Decrease bone and muscle mass
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16
Q

Hypogonadism Features : Post-pubertal onset

A
Normal skeletal proportions, penis/prostate size and voice
Decreased libido 
Decreased spontaneous erections 
Decrease pubic/ axillary hair
Decreased testicular volume 
Gynaecomastia
Decreased muscle and bone mass
Decreased energy and motivation
17
Q

Hypogonadism Diagnosis

A

Signs/ Symptoms of low testosterone

  • Measure AM testosterone
    (if normal hypogonadism unlikely)
  • If low repeat AM testosterone
  • If repeat is low, measure LH and FSH

Elevated LH/ FSH

  • -> Hypergonadotrophic Hypogonadism (primary)
  • Karyotyping and iron studies

Low/ Inappropriately normal LH/FSH

  • -> Hypogonadotrophic hypogonadism (secondary)
  • Exclude medications
  • Prolactin and pituitary hormones
  • MRI
  • Iron studies
18
Q

Hypogonadism management

A

Testosterone Replacement therapy

19
Q

Testosterone replacement therapy monitoring

A

3-6 monthly whilst starting then annually

DRE and PSA
Haematocrit
Symptoms of sleep apnoea

20
Q

Contraindications for testosterone replacement therapy

A

Confirmed hormone responsive cancer (breast & prostate)

Possible prostate cancer (raised PSA)

Haematocrit >50%

Severe sleep apnoea/ HF