| Literature DB >> 25580312 |
Murat Atmaca1, İsmet Seven2, Rıfkı Üçler1, Murat Alay1, Veysi Barut2, Yaren Dirik2, Yasin Sezgin2.
Abstract
Mild clinical signs of hyperandrogenism such as hirsutism may appear during the menopausal transition as part of the normal aging process, but the development of frank virilization suggests a specific source of androgen excess. We report a case of a 68-year-old woman with signs of virilization that had started 6 months before. Clinical analyses revealed high levels of serum testosterone for a postmenopausal woman. Pelvic MRI and abdomen CT showed no evidence of ovarian and adrenal tumor. Postmenopausal hyperandrogenism can be the result of numerous etiologies ranging from normal physiologic changes to ovarian or rarely adrenal tumors. Our patient was found to have iatrogenic hyperandrogenism. This condition is rarely reported cause of virilization.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25580312 PMCID: PMC4280803 DOI: 10.1155/2014/987272
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Endocrinol ISSN: 2090-651X
Hormonal profiles of case.
| Normal range | Result | |
|---|---|---|
| Follicle stimulating hormone | 26,7–133,41 IU/L | 30,09 IU/L |
| Luteinizing hormone | 10,39–64,57 IU/L | 13,04 IU/L |
| Estradiol | 0–73,42 pmol/L | 55,06 pmol/L |
| Total testosterone | 0,38–1,97 nmol/L | 25,40 nmol/L |
| Sex hormone binding globulin | 19,8–155,2 nmol/L | 43,1 nmol/L |
| Progesterone | 0–636 pmol/L | 318 pmol/L |
| 17 OH progesterone | 605–2723 pmol/L | 302,57 pmol/L |
| Adrenocorticotropin hormone | 0–10 pmol/L | 3,3 pmol/L |
| Cortisol | 100–535 nmol/L | 330 nmol/L |
| 1 mg dexamethasone suppression test | 0–50 nmol/L | 2,7 nmol/L |
| Dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate | 270–540 nmol/L | 508 nmol/L |