| Literature DB >> 28412334 |
Jyoti D Chouhan1, David I Chu2, Antoinette Birs3, Louise C Pyle4, Jason P Van Batavia2, Rebecca L Linn5, Susan J Back6, Pierre Russo5, Kassa Darge6, Thomas F Kolon2, Arun K Srinivasan7.
Abstract
We present 2 patients found to have ovotesticular disorder of sexual development (otDSD) in late adolescence. Two 15-year-old phenotypically male patients presented to a large pediatric hospital with different complaints: 1 with concern for testicular rupture after a straddle injury; 1 with gynecomastia. Further workup, including imaging and laboratory tests, was performed before surgical exploration. The first patient had unilateral ovotestis, contralateral testis, and SRY-negative 46,XX karyotype. The second patient with gynecomastia had unilateral ovotestis with hemi-uterus and fallopian tube, contralateral ovarian tissue, and 46,XX/47,XXY Klinefelter mosaic karyotype. Although rare, phenotypically normal male patients may present later with ovotesticular disorder of sexual development.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28412334 PMCID: PMC5503104 DOI: 10.1016/j.urology.2017.04.009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Urology ISSN: 0090-4295 Impact factor: 2.649