Indian Journal of Endocrinology and Metabolism (Jan 2012)

De morseir syndrome presenting as ambiguous genitalia

  • Anubhav Thukral,
  • S Chitra,
  • Partho P Chakraborty,
  • Ajitesh Roy,
  • Soumik Goswami,
  • Rana Bhattacharjee,
  • Deep Dutta,
  • Indira Maisnam,
  • Sujoy Ghosh,
  • Satinath Mukherjee,
  • Subhankar Chowdhury

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4103/2230-8210.104151
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 8
pp. 509 – 511

Abstract

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Background: A 10-year-old boy presented with genital ambiguity, poor linear growth, and delayed milestones. The aim and to highlight that although rare but congenital, hypogonadotropic hypogonadism may rarely present as ambiguity. Materials and Methods: The patient was found to have bilateral cryptorchidism with proximal penile hypospadias, microphallus with a proportionate dwarfism with mildly delayed bone age, and karyotype 46XY. Euthyroid with normal steroid axis, growth hormone insufficient as suggested by auxology, low IGF1, and poor response to clonidine stimulation. MRI brain shows hypoplastic corpus callosum, hypoplastic anterior pituitary, and ectopic posterior pituitary bright spot. Results: The patient underwent laparoscopic removal of right intrabdominal testis and orchidoplexy was performed on the left one. Testicular biopsy revealed no malignancy and growth hormone replacement was initiated. The patient awaits definitive repair of hypospadias. Conclusion: As a provisional diagnosis of combined growth hormone and gonadotropin deficiency, most probable diagnosis is septo-optic dysplasia or de moseir syndrome leading to genital ambiguity.

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