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Early and late puberty Tim Cheetham January 2011.

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Presentation on theme: "Early and late puberty Tim Cheetham January 2011."— Presentation transcript:

1 Early and late puberty Tim Cheetham January 2011

2 1. Normal physiology Adrenal Gonad

3 Steroid producing tissues
Adrenal glands Ovaries Androgen Oestrogen Androgen Peripheral tissue Oestrogen

4 Do men make oestrogen? Do women make testosterone?

5 Do babies make sex steroid?

6 Gn production in boys Gn Age

7 Normal physiology What next?

8 Adrenarche Body odour Greasy hair Acne Pubic hair Pre-puberty

9 cholesterol Adrenal Adrenarche A C Weak Androgen

10 cholesterol Adrenal Adrenarche A C Weak androgens Weak Androgen

11 7 year old Body odour Greasy hair 2 or 3 pubic hairs Body odour
Adrenal Adrenarche Body odour Pubic Hair

12 What next? Body odour Pubic Hair Adrenarche pituitary LH, FSH adrenal
gonad Adrenarche Body odour Pubic Hair Girls - Bust development Boys - Testicular enlargement

13

14 Ovarian volume

15 Puberty ♀: Growth spurt 2 years before boys, at start of clinical puberty Peak height velocity ~12 years Followed by menarche ♂: Growth spurt when puberty already well established (testicular volume ~ 10 mls) Peak height velocity ~14 years

16 2. ‘Early puberty’ Bust development in the very young child
Early pubic hair Precocious puberty

17 Isolated premature thelarche
Gn Bust tissue Age

18 Early pubic hair

19 Adrenarche Body odour Pubic Hair Acne

20 Adrenarche More pronounced or early if: Obese SGA History of PCOS

21 Adrenarche Body odour Pubic Hair Acne cholesterol A C Weak androgens
CAH Adrenal tumour A C Weak androgens Body odour Pubic Hair Acne

22 Adrenarche Body odour Pubic Hair Acne cholesterol A C Androgens CAH
Adrenal tumour A C Androgens Body odour Pubic Hair Acne

23 Investigations? Nothing Morning 17-OHP and testosterone

24 Obesity Promotes growth (height) in early life
Associated with an earlier onset of puberty Hence the Paediatricians interest in the short, heavy child

25

26

27 True precocious puberty
Bust development < 8 years in girls Testicular enlargement < 9 years in boys

28 Early puberty: Idiopathic – girls CNS lesion – boys LH, FSH Bust development Testicular enlargement

29 Gonadotrophin independent
Bust development Testicular enlargement

30 ‘Pseudoprecocious puberty’

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32 TSH - hypothyroidism Bust development Testicular enlargement

33 Case 1: Jordan Age 20 months Pubic hair ‘Large testes’ Tall
Healthy non-consanguinous parents

34 Examination Height and weight 75th centile Penile length +2 SD
Testicular volume 3 mls Pubic hair stage 1

35 Investigations Time (min) LH (U/L) FSH(IU/L) 0 <1 <1
0 <1 <1 <1 <1 Urine steroid profile – normal 17 OHP – 1.3 nmol/L Testosterone < 1nmol/l

36 Jordan 3.2 years Concerns about gait Increase in size of genitalia
Temper tantrums Testes 4-5 mls Penile length 7 cm PH stage 2 Concerns about gait

37 MPH

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39 Investigations MRI brain No intra-cranial abnormality shown.
Time (min) LH (U/L) FSH(IU/L) Testosterone nmol/L MRI brain No intra-cranial abnormality shown. No mass lesion shown in the pituitary fossa nor in the hypo-thalamic region. There is a little asymmetry in the lateral ventricles just above the foramen of Monro but there is no structural abnormality to account for this.

40 Jordan Diagnosis – ‘Idiopathic’ GDPP’
Started on Leuprorelin acetate injections

41 Jordan – 6 years Ongoing concerns about gait Plan
Neurodevelopmental assessment Repeat MRI

42 JH – high signal in the white matter
In keeping with perinatal ischaemic injury

43 Precocious puberty and CNS lesions
Abnormal (enhanced) gonadotrophin production can commence at a very early age

44 3. Delayed puberty ~ 14 years in girls ~ 15 years in boys

45 Delayed puberty Scenario 1 LH, FSH

46 Delayed puberty Scenario 1 LH, FSH Causes 1. Late 2. Chronic illness
3. Endocrinopathy eg prolactinoma tumour Gn deficiency

47 Delayed puberty Scenario 2 LH, FSH

48 Delayed puberty Scenario 2 LH, FSH Causes Ovarian pathology
Abnormal karyotype

49 Case 1

50 CW

51 CW

52 Key features Family history of late puberty
Well child – no evidence of chronic illness Not dysmorphic Bone age delay

53 Constitutional delay of growth and puberty
CW Testosterone ‘Hares and tortoises’ Constitutional delay of growth and puberty

54 Pubertal growth Males Females ~ 20 to 30 cm ~15 to 25 cm

55 Case 2 Short stature Late puberty

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57 Both parents short No family history of late puberty

58 Examination Prepubertal Not dysmorphic Obese

59

60 ‘Short and heavy’ Simple obesity PHP Syndromes Cushings Hypothyroid
GHD / CPHD

61 Plan?

62 Plan? Thyroid function IGF-I 24h UFC

63 TSH 1.27 Free T4 9 (11 – 23) IGF-I 10 (25 – 67) 24h UFC normal

64 Further investigations

65 Further investigations
Pituitary function tests

66 Time mins TSH mU/l FT4 GH PRL 3.7 1.3 9 166 0.4 314 30 6.7 231 0.2 410
Glucose mmol/l TSH mU/l FT4 pmol/l Cortisol nmol/l GH PRL 3.7 1.3 9 166 0.4 314 30 6.7 231 0.2 410 60 5.1 175 0.3 90 3.6 160 1.1 120 3.2 387 0.8 150 595 0.7 180 477 1.0 210 3.8 509 240 3.9 518 1.4

67 Diagnosis Isolated GH deficiency +/- gonadotrophin deficiency dating from early life?

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69

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71 Clues? Short and heavy Thyroid function

72 Summary A knowledge of normal physiology valuable when faced with early/late puberty Early pubic hair - ?Non-classical CAH Early puberty – consider referral Late puberty – well child? - Family history? Late puberty – beware short and heavy - FSH/LH


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