Genital System - Abnormalities: Difference between revisions
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:'''Links:''' [[Cardiovascular System - Spleen Development|Spleen Development]] | :'''Links:''' [[Cardiovascular System - Spleen Development|Spleen Development]] | ||
==Testicular Microlithiasis== | |||
Adult male testis abnormality associated with the deposition of multiple tiny calcifications throughout the testes (usually bilateral), present in up to 5.6% of the general adult population between 17 and 35 years of age. Also present in about 50% of men with a germ cell tumour. | |||
==References== | ==References== |
Revision as of 14:12, 16 March 2016
Embryology - 20 Jun 2024 Expand to Translate |
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Introduction
How and why do things go wrong in development?
Human genital abnormalities are currently described as "Disorders of Sex Development" (DSD) and includes: chromosomal, gonadal dysfunction, tract abnormalities, external genitalia and gonadal descent. The genital system is closely associated developmentally and anatomically with the renal system, often called the "urogenital system", therefore abnormalities of renal development should also be considered when studying this topic.
- The earlier term "intersex" and a variety of other previously applied terms related to genetic abnormalities have been replaced by the term "disorders of sex development" (DSD).
Some Recent Findings
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More recent papers |
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This table allows an automated computer search of the external PubMed database using the listed "Search term" text link.
More? References | Discussion Page | Journal Searches | 2019 References | 2020 References Search term: Genital Abnormalities <pubmed limit=5>Genital Abnormalities</pubmed> Search term: Disorders of Sex Development <pubmed limit=5>Disorders of Sex Development</pubmed> |
Human Genital Development Critical Periods
International Classification of Diseases
ICD 10 - XVII Congenital Malformations
The International Classification of Diseases (ICD) World Health Organization's classification used worldwide as the standard diagnostic tool for epidemiology, health management and clinical purposes. This includes the analysis of the general health situation of population groups. It is used to monitor the incidence and prevalence of diseases and other health problems. Within this classification "congenital malformations, deformations and chromosomal abnormalities" are (Q00-Q99) but excludes "inborn errors of metabolism" (E70-E90).
Congenital malformations of genital organs (Q50-Q56)
Excl.: androgen resistance syndrome (E34.5) syndromes associated with anomalies in the number and form of chromosomes (90-99) testicular feminization syndrome (E34.5)
Q50 Congenital malformations of ovaries, fallopian tubes and broad ligaments
- Q50.0 Congenital absence of ovary Excl.: Turner's syndrome (96.-)
- Q50.1 Developmental ovarian cyst
- Q50.2 Congenital torsion of ovary
- Q50.3 Other congenital malformations of ovary Accessory ovary Congenital malformation of ovary NOS Ovarian streak
- Q50.4 Embryonic cyst of fallopian tube Fimbrial cyst
- Q50.5 Embryonic cyst of broad ligament Cyst: epoophoron Gartner's duct parovarian
- Q50.6 Other congenital malformations of fallopian tube and broad ligament Absence Accessory Atresia (of) fallopian tube or broad ligament Congenital malformation of fallopian tube or broad ligament NOS
Q51 Congenital malformations of uterus and cervix
- Q51.0 Agenesis and aplasia of uterus Congenital absence of uterus
- Q51.1 Doubling of uterus with doubling of cervix and vagina
- Q51.2 Other doubling of uterus Doubling of uterus NOS
- Q51.3 Bicornate uterus
- Q51.4 Unicornate uterus
- Q51.5 Agenesis and aplasia of cervix Congenital absence of cervix
- Q51.6 Embryonic cyst of cervix
- Q51.7 Congenital fistulae between uterus and digestive and urinary tracts
- Q51.8 Other congenital malformations of uterus and cervix Hypoplasia of uterus and cervix
- Q51.9 Congenital malformation of uterus and cervix, unspecified
Q52 Other congenital malformations of female genitalia
- Q52.0 Congenital absence of vagina
- Q52.1 Doubling of vagina Septate vagina Excl.: doubling of vagina with doubling of uterus and cervix (51.1)
- Q52.2 Congenital rectovaginal fistula Excl.: cloaca (43.7)
- Q52.3 Imperforate hymen
- Q52.4 Other congenital malformations of vagina Congenital malformation of vagina NOS Cyst: canal of Nuck, congenital embryonic vaginal
- Q52.5 Fusion of labia
- Q52.6 Congenital malformation of clitoris
- Q52.7 Other congenital malformations of vulva Congenital: absence cyst malformation NOS of vulva
- Q52.8 Other specified congenital malformations of female genitalia
- Q52.9 Congenital malformation of female genitalia, unspecified
Q53 Undescended testicle
- Q53.0 Ectopic testis Unilateral or bilateral ectopic testes
- Q53.1 Undescended testicle, unilateral
- Q53.2 Undescended testicle, bilateral
- Q53.9 Undescended testicle, unspecified Cryptorchism NOS
Q54 Hypospadias
Excl.: epispadias (64.0)
- Q54.0 Hypospadias, balanic Hypospadias: coronal glandular
- Q54.1 Hypospadias, penile
- Q54.2 Hypospadias, penoscrotal
- Q54.3 Hypospadias, perineal
- Q54.4 Congenital chordee
- Q54.8 Other hypospadias
- Q54.9 Hypospadias, unspecified
Q55 Other congenital malformations of male genital organs
Excl.: congenital hydrocele (P83.5) hypospadias (54.-)
- Q55.0 Absence and aplasia of testis Monorchism
- Q55.1 Hypoplasia of testis and scrotum Fusion of testes
- Q55.2 Other congenital malformations of testis and scrotum Congenital malformation of testis or scrotum NOS Polyorchism Retractile testis Testis migrans
- Q55.3 Atresia of vas deferens
- Q55.4 Other congenital malformations of vas deferens, epididymis, seminal vesicles and prostate Absence or aplasia of: prostate spermatic cord Congenital malformation of vas deferens, epididymis, seminal vesicles or prostate NOS
- Q55.5 Congenital absence and aplasia of penis
- Q55.6 Other congenital malformations of penis Congenital malformation of penis NOS Curvature of penis (lateral) Hypoplasia of penis
- Q55.8 Other specified congenital malformations of male genital organs
- Q55.9 Congenital malformation of male genital organ, unspecified Congenital: anomaly deformity NOS of male genital organ
Q56 Indeterminate sex and pseudohermaphroditism
Excl.: pseudohermaphroditism: female, with adrenocortical disorder (E25.-) male, with androgen resistance (E34.5) with specified chromosomal anomaly (96-99)
- Q56.0 Hermaphroditism, not elsewhere classified Ovotestis
- Q56.1 Male pseudohermaphroditism, not elsewhere classified Male pseudohermaphroditism NOS
- Q56.2 Female pseudohermaphroditism, not elsewhere classified Female pseudohermaphroditism NOS
- Q56.3 Pseudohermaphroditism, unspecified
- Q56.4 Indeterminate sex, unspecified Ambiguous genitalia
Please note that this category uses old terminology, that has been replaced elsewhere with "Disorders of Sex Development (DSD)".
Disorders of Sex Development
The previous human sex development terminology (true hermaphrodites, male pseudohermaphrodites and female pseudohermaphrodites) are considered outdated and stigmatising and have been replaced with the general term Disorders of Sex Development (DSD) established by the Consensus statement on management of intersex disorders.[5] See also the Medical Journal of Australia 2009 editorial article.[6]
Previous Terminology | New Proposed Terminology |
Intersex | DSD |
Male pseudohermaphrodite, undervirilization of an XY male, and undermasculinization of an XY male | 46,XY DSD |
Female pseudohermaphrodite, overvirilization of an XX female, and masculinization of an XX female | 46,XX DSD |
True hermaphrodite | Ovotesticular DSD |
XX male or XX sex reversal | 46,XX testicular DSD |
XY sex reversal | 46,XY complete gonadal dysgenesis |
Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia
- impairment of cortisol production by the adrenal cortex, is one of the most common causes of intersex genitalia at birth
- genetically male (XY) infants born with undervirilized genitalia (androgen insensitivity syndrome, cloacal exstrophy) are generally assigned and reared as girls.
Congenital adrenal hyperplasia due to 21-hydroxylase deficiency can be prenatally diagnosed in utero through molecular genetic analysis of fetal DNA. Prenatal treatment by dexamethasone administration to the at-risk pregnant mother has been shown to be effective in reducing genital virilization in the fetus, avoiding unnecessary postnatal genitoplasty in affected females.[7]
There has been recorded a prevalence of reduced fecundity in men with congenital adrenal hyperplasia, related to testicular adrenal rest tumours and poor semen parameters.[8]
Androgen Insensitivity Syndrome
There is a database (Androgen Receptor Gene Mutations) of 1,029 reported androgen receptor mutations.[9]
A recent article has also looked in cell culture at the androgen receptor interacting proteins[10] and
- Partial androgen insensitivity syndrome - (PAIS) associated with impaired male genital development that can be transmitted through mutations in the androgen receptor.
Cryptorchidism
The external location of the testes in the scrotum acts as a local thermo-regulator and provides a temperature environment below that of the general body temperature.[12] This thermal function is essential for normal spermatogenesis and cryptorchidism therefore affects fertility.
- abnormality of either unilateral or bilateral testicular descent, occurring in up to 30% premature and 3-4% term males.
- Descent may complete postnatally in the first year, failure to descend can result in sterility.
Testis descent is thought to have 2 phases:
- transabdominal descent - dependent on insulin-like hormone 3 (INSL3).
- inguinoscrotal descent - dependent on androgens.
Management of cryptorchidism in children: guidelines.[13] "Cryptorchidism is best diagnosed clinically, and treated by surgical orchiopexy at age 6-12 months, without a routine biopsy. If no testis is palpable, or if other signs of hypovirilisation such as hypospadias are present, the chromosomal sex and hormonal status must be assessed. Laparoscopy is the best way of diagnosing and managing intra-abdominal testes."
- Links: Testis Development
Undescended Ovaries
- reasonably rare gonad abnormality, often detected following clinical assessment of fertility problems and may also be associated with other uterine malformations (unicornuate uterus).
- Due to the relative positions of the male (external) and female (internal) gonads and the pathways for their movement, failure of gonad descent is more apparent and common in male cryptorchidism than female undescended ovaries.
Hydrocele
- Male Hydrocele is a fluid-filled cavity of either testis or spermatic cord, where peritoneal fluid passes into a patent processus vaginalis.
- Female Hydrocele is a similar, but rarer, fluid-filled cavity occuring in the female as a pouch of peritoneum extending into the labium majorum (canal of Nuck).
Anogenital Distance
Anogenital Distance (AGD) is a clinical measurement of a parameter that is sexually dimorphic for genital development. This distance, from the posterior aspect of the scrotum to the anal verge, has been used as a marker for endocrine disruption in animal studies and may also be shorter in infant males with genital anomalies (More? see related references)
A recent study in humans has shown that infertile men possessed significantly shorter mean AGD than fertile men.[2]
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Tract Abnormalities
Many different forms
- Uterine: associated with other anomolies, unicornuate uterus
- Vagina: agenesis, atresia
- Ductus Deferens: Unilateral or bilateral absence, failure of mesonephric duct to differentiate
Bicornuate uterus containing conceptus chorionic sac with placental cord on one side.
Uterine Duplication
(uterus didelphys, double uterus, uterus didelphis) A rare uterine developmental abnormality where the paramesonephric ducts (Mullerian ducts) completely fail to fuse generating two separate uterus parts each connected to the cervix and having an ovary each.
Septate Uterus
Cervical: cervical agenesis, cervical duplication
Vaginal: Mayer-Rokitansky syndrome (MRK anomaly, Rokitansky-Küster-Hauser syndrome, RKH syndrome, RKH) congenital absence of the vagina, dyspareunia, vaginal agenesis.
Male - Persistent Müllerian Duct Syndrome
Persistent Müllerian Duct Syndrome (PMDS) men are genotypic and externally phenotypic males with cryptorchidism, sometimes associated with inguinal hernia.[14]
- transverse testicular ectopia - one testis descends into the scrotum pulling the ipsilateral Fallopian tube into the inguinal canal (hernia uteri inguinalis).
- bilateral cryptorchidism - the uterus is fixed in the pelvis and both testes are embedded in the broad ligament in ovarian position.
Polycystic Ovary Syndrome
(PCOS) or Stein–Leventhal syndrome (1930s researchers) a metabolic syndrome with many other symptoms, ovarian cysts arise through incomplete follicular development or failure of ovulation. For review see [15] It has recently been suggested (NIH workshop 2012) that the name "Polycystic Ovary Syndrome" is not appropriate for the condition and should be renamed.
- Links: Ovary Abnormalities
Hypospadia
Hypospadias are the most common penis abnormality (1 in 300) and result from a failure of male urogenital folds to fuse in various regions. This in turn leads to resulting in a proximally displaced urethral meatus. The cause is unknown, but suggested to involve many factors either indivdually or in combination including: familial inheritance, low birth weight, assisted reproductive technology, advanced maternal age, paternal subfertility and endocrine-disrupting chemicals.[17] Maternal hypertension during pregnancy has also been shown to double the risk and a pregnancy diet lacking meat and fish also show an increase in hypospadias.[18] Infants with hypospadias should not undergo circumcision.
Hypospadia Classification | Meatus Opening |
Anterior | on inferior surface of glans penis |
Coronal | in balanopenile furrow |
Distal | on distal third of shaft |
Penoscrotal | at base of shaft in front of scrotum |
Scrotal | on scrotum or between the genital swellings |
Perineal | behind scrotum or genital swellings |
Surgical Repair
Depending on the class of hypospadias there are a number of different surgical repair techniques including: orthoplasty or penile straightening, urethroplasty, meatoplasty and glanuloplasty, scrotoplasty (oscheoplasty) and skin coverage.
Related Genetic Conditions
- Johanson-Blizzard syndrome[19] - hypospadias, failure to thrive, exocrine pancreatic deficiency, short stature and developmental delay, cutis aplasia on the scalp, aplasia of alae nasi, hypothyroidism, myxomatous mitral valve, and patent ductus arteriosus.
Splenogonadal Fusion
Rare abnormality resulting from fusion of the splenic and gonadal primordia during prenatal development.[20] On the left side and more common in male and adhesion to the gonad, epididymis or ductus deferens and then follows the caudal descent with the gonad. Failure of complete descent can also result in associated intraabdominal cryptorchism.
Two classifications:
- continuous - orthotopic spleen connects to the gonad with a cord of fibrous or splenic tissue.
- discontinuous - no connection between the orthotopic spleen and gonad.
- Links: Spleen Development
Testicular Microlithiasis
Adult male testis abnormality associated with the deposition of multiple tiny calcifications throughout the testes (usually bilateral), present in up to 5.6% of the general adult population between 17 and 35 years of age. Also present in about 50% of men with a germ cell tumour.
References
- ↑ Burcharth J, Pedersen M, Bisgaard T, Pedersen C, Rosenberg J Nationwide Prevalence of Groin Hernia Repair PLoS ONE 8(1): e54367. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0054367 (2013) PLoS ONE
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 [Eisenberg ML, Hsieh MH, Walters RC, Krasnow R, Lipshultz LI. The Relationship between Anogenital Distance, Fatherhood, and Fertility in Adult Men. PLoS One. 2011 May 11;6(5):e18973. PMID:21589916 | PMC3092750 | PLoS One.
- ↑ <pubmed>20501980</pubmed>
- ↑ <pubmed>20503482</pubmed>
- ↑ <pubmed>16882788</pubmed>| Pediatrics.
- ↑ <pubmed>19485836</pubmed>| Med J Aust.
- ↑ <pubmed>19101608</pubmed>
- ↑ <pubmed>19258407</pubmed>| J Clin Endocrinol Metab.
- ↑ <pubmed>22334387</pubmed>
- ↑ <pubmed>22518120</pubmed>
- ↑ <pubmed>18032558</pubmed>| Hum Reprod Update.
- ↑ <pubmed>17839834</pubmed>
- ↑ <pubmed>18726735</pubmed>
- ↑ <pubmed>16544032</pubmed>
- ↑ <pubmed>14748678</pubmed>
- ↑ <pubmed>11713004</pubmed>
- ↑ <pubmed>11713004</pubmed>
- ↑ <pubmed>18709149</pubmed>| PMC2516569
- ↑ <pubmed>20556423</pubmed>
- ↑ <pubmed>2191479</pubmed>
Reviews
<pubmed>21727142</ref>
Ostrer, H. 46,XY Disorder of Sex Development and 46,XY Complete Gonadal Dysgenesis GeneReviews Pagon RA, Bird TD, Dolan CR, et al., editors. Seattle (WA): University of Washington, Seattle; 1993-
Articles
<pubmed>21525798</pubmed>
Books
Evaluation and Treatment of Cryptorchidism. Penson DF, Krishnaswami S, Jules A, Seroogy JC, McPheeters ML. Rockville (MD): Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (US); 2012 Dec. PMID 23326894
Search Pubmed
Search Pubmed: Genital System Abnormalities | Disorders of Sex Development | Hypospadia
External Links
External Links Notice - The dynamic nature of the internet may mean that some of these listed links may no longer function. If the link no longer works search the web with the link text or name. Links to any external commercial sites are provided for information purposes only and should never be considered an endorsement. UNSW Embryology is provided as an educational resource with no clinical information or commercial affiliation.
- DSD Consortium Guidelines | Handbook for Parents
- EuroDSD EuroDSD programme is a collaboration of doctors and scientists from all over Europe. Long-term outcome studies on the various DSD entities are desperately needed in order to establish a basis for evidence-based medicine regarding sex assignment and conservative and surgical treatment options.
- German DSD network
- Italian registry for DSD
- UK
- Intersex Society of North America
- Turner Syndrome Society of the U.S.
- Androgen Receptor Gene Mutations Database
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Cite this page: Hill, M.A. (2024, June 20) Embryology Genital System - Abnormalities. Retrieved from https://embryology.med.unsw.edu.au/embryology/index.php/Genital_System_-_Abnormalities
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