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17,20-desmolase deficiency in a female newborn, paradoxically virilized in utero
Authors:E de Peretti  M Pradon  M G Forest
Abstract:The patient was born with ambiguous genitalia (stade III of Prader). The karyotype revealed a normal female genotype. A defect in 21-hydroxylase, at first suspected, was denied by the hormonal studies. Indeed, extremely high levels of pregnenolone, pregnenolone sulfate, progesterone were found in association with low plasma levels of delta 4-androstenedione, testosterone, dehydroepiandrosterone and its sulfate, while cortisol 17OH-progesterone and ACTH levels and plasma renin activity were normal. The hormonal pattern was thus consistent with 17,20-desmolase deficiency. The dynamic studies further supported this contention: all the progestagens rose further after ACTH stimulation and were suppressed by dexamethasone. Meanwhile, all androgens failed to rise after ACTH: the responses of cortisol were normal. The in utero virilization of the female fetus was not understood until an history of virilization was allegedly found in the mother (luteoma of pregnancy). This is the first case of 17-20 desmolase defect recognized in a female newborn. This child, born with ambiguous genitalia had presented the concurrence of two very rare conditions. The in utero virilization of maternal origin enabled us to make the diagnosis of the 17-20 desmolase defect, which otherwise would have been ignored in a XX subject in the neonatal period because it would obviously be unsymptomatic at this age.
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