The child of uncertain sex: 17 years of experience


Autoria(s): Al-Agha, A. E.; Thomsett, M. J.; Batch, J. A.
Contribuinte(s)

Dr J. M. Court

Data(s)

01/08/2001

Resumo

Objective: To review the common clinical presentations, investigations and final diagnosis of children presenting with genital ambiguity. Methodology: Retrospective search of the Royal Children's Hospital, Brisbane, Australia, medical records and personal medical database of one of the authors (MJT) between 1982 and 1999. Results: Fifty-one children aged 0.1-;14 (mean 3.9) years were identified. Twenty-two cases had a 46XX karyotype, and commonly presented with an enlarged phallus (77.2%), urogenital sinus (63.6%) and labioscrotal fold(s) (40.9%). Congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH) was the most common final diagnosis (72.7%) . Twenty-nine cases of genital ambiguity had a 46XY karyotype and commonly presented with palpable gonad(s) (75.8%), undescended testes (51.7%), penoscrotal hypospadias (51.7%) and a small phallus (41.3%). Androgen insensitivity and gonadal dysgenesis were the commonest final diagnosis both occurring at a frequency of 17.2%. Conclusions: The results emphasize the importance of CAH as the most common diagnosis in 46XX cases presenting with ambiguous genitalia. Those with 46XY had a wider range of diagnoses. Despite thorough investigation, 23.5% had no definite final diagnosis made.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:59184

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Blackwell Science Asia

Palavras-Chave #Indeterminate Sex #Sexual Differentiation. #Pediatrics #Sexual Differentiation #Newborn-infants #Differentiation #Abnormalities #Disorders #C1 #321004 Endocrinology #730105 Endocrine organs and diseases (incl. diabetes)
Tipo

Journal Article