Pubertylecture 2
Pubertylecture 2
Abnormal
For UG-2014
Puberty
• Disorders of puberty constitute one of
most common referrals to paediatric
endocrine clinics
• Careful history and examination
paramount
• Ensure sensitivity at all times
• Chaperone during pubertal examination
Puberty
• Physiological transition from childhood to
reproductive maturity
• Associated with:
– Growth spurt
– Appearance of both primary and secondary
sexual characteristics in children
• Important to understand
– Range of normal
– Population differences
Normal Puberty: Endocrine control
• Onset of puberty signalled by the secretion of pulses of
Gonadotrophin Releasing Hormone (GnRH)
• Prior to puberty: hormonal feedback / central neural
suppression of GnRH release suppress onset of puberty
• Hypothalamo-pituitary-gonadal axis starts working in
foetus. After birth, sex hormones and gonadotrophins
(FSH, LH) found in adult levels
• Levels reduce in months after birth; pulsatile GnRH
reduces in childhood and increases in frequency and
amplitude before puberty
• For 2 yrs before puberty, rise in adrenal androgens
early pubic hair and spots
Physiology of Puberty
• Activation of the hypothalamic – pituitary –
gonadal axis
Pubertal Delay
• Hyperprolactinemia
– Interfere with gonadotropin production
**prolactinomas may not always be visible on
imaging**
Investigating Delayed Puberty
• Investigations depend on clinical presentation,
but may include
– Bone age
– Hormone levels (IGF-1, FSH, LH, estradiol,
testosterone, DHEAS, prolactin, TSH)
– Karyotype
– Hormone stimulation tests
• GnRH stimulation test
• GH stimulation test
– Imaging
• MRI if gonadotropins high & no obvious cause of
hypogonadotropic hypogonadism
Psychological Distress in Pubertal
Delay
• Much has been written about psychological distress in
males with delayed puberty
• Self-Esteem & Sexuality in girls with Turner Syndrome
has been studied
– Generally had low self-esteem scores (general & social)
– Lifetime sexual experience associated with overall SEI score
– Increasing sexual experience had no effect (all-or-none
phenomenon)
– Ross et al. -> initiation of estrogen therapy associated with
increased self-esteem in girls with Turner syndrome
cont
• Hetrosexual (masculinizing)
Congenital adrenal hyperplasia
Adrenal tumor
Ovarian tumor
Glucocorticoid receptor defect
Exogenous androgens.
Conditions causing precocious
pseudopuberty in males
• Isosexual
congenital adrenal hyperplasia
Adrenocortical tumor
Leydig cell tumor
Familial male precocious puberty
HCG secreting tumor
Teratoma
cont
Glucocorticoid receptor defect
Exogenous androgen
• Hertrosexual
Feminizing adrenocortical tumor
Exogenous estrogens
Approach to patient with precocious
puberty
• History
(Medication )
(family history of precocious puberty)
• Physical examination
(Wt, Ht, Eye, Thyroid, abdomen, tests)
• paraclinical findings
• bone age
cont
• Estradial
• Testosterone
• LH
• FSH
• GnRH stimulation test
(LH/FSH> 1)
(LH>5- 10 IU/L)
• Sonography
(ovaries, Uterus, adrenal glands, testes)
• MRI of brain
(MRI of hypothalamus and hypophysis)
cont
The goals of treatment for CPP
GnRH analogues
GnRH antagonist
Aromatize inhibitors
Indications for therapy with GnRH
agonist
• True precocious puberty in males
• Rapid progressive CPP in girls
• To stop puberty because of social and
psychological reasons
The effect of GnRH agonist therapy on:
• Growth
• Skeletal age
• Pubertal development
• Hormones
Treatment is effective if:
1. Serum sex hormone concentration
decrease to prepubertal levels
( testosterone < 20ng/ dL in boys estradial
< 10pg/mL in girls)
1. Serum FSH and LH < 1 IU/L
2. LH/FSH < 1
Physiological status after completion
of therapy
• Growth rate
• Bone density
• Pubertal development
• Hormones
• Fertility
Premature thelarche / pubarche
• Thelarche – beginning of breast development
• Pubarche – first appearance of pubic hair
– (more common in certain populations e.g asian / afro-caribbean )
• More common than true precocious puberty
• Benign variants
– breast development in girls < 3yrs with spontaneous regression
– Pubic hair in boys and girls < 7yrs due to adrenal androgen
secretion in middle childhood
• Psychological support
• Absence of a growth
spurt and axillary or
pubic hair
differentiates
thelarche from
precocious puberty
Ambiguous genitalia
• Range of presentations
– Inadequately developed male to virilised female
• Most common cause is Congenital Adrenal
Hyperplasia → virilised female
• Urgent identification as can cause adrenal
failure in neonatal period
• Do not ascribe sex immediately
• Identify cause of intersex
• Karyotype does not indicate the sex of rearing
• Family counselling imperative
• Early surgery now less popular
Thank You