Endocrinologic Characteristics of Partial Ovarian Failure
- 1 August 1976
- journal article
- research article
- Published by The Endocrine Society in Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism
- Vol. 43 (2) , 449-452
- https://doi.org/10.1210/jcem-43-2-449
Abstract
Three young women with primary ovarian failure, secondary amenorrhea or oligoovulation, and normal gonadotropin levels are reported on here. Vaginal cytology and serum estradiol levels indicated the two women to be persistently hypoestrogenic. The third case, who had the Turner phenotype, was hypoestrogenic during anovulatory cycles but occasionally ovulated. Basal serum LH and FSH were normal. All were tested with synthetic LH-releasing hormone and had a brisk response, LH levels rising 51–198 ng/ml above baseline and FSH rising 278–536 ng/ml. Plasma levels of testosterone, dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate, and progesterone were normal. Gonadal dysgenesis was suggested in two on the basis of an abnormal karyotype, an isochromosome of the short arm of X in Case 2, and an isochromosome of the long arm of X in Case 3. The diagnosis of primary hypogonadism was established by laparoscopy and ovarian biopsy. The latter studies revealed small ovaries with a scarcity of primordial and primary follicles, yet with evidence of current or previous follicular activity. The observation that hypoestrogenism was so marked in two of our patients that elevated serum FSH would have been expected, suggests that the presence of a limited number of ovarian follicles suffices to prevent hypergonadotropism in hypoestrogenic women by a mechanism which does not involve elaboration of sex steroids.Keywords
This publication has 1 reference indexed in Scilit:
- Clinical and Cytogenetical Studies in Female Gonadal Dysgenesis and Their Bearing on the Cause of Turner’s SyndromeCytogenetic and Genome Research, 1964