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C. Wayne Bardin, Mortimer B. Lipsett
J Clin Invest. 1967;
46(5):891
doi:10.1172/JCI105588
Abstract |
Full text
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T
he average plasma testosterone concentration of women with either hirsutism or polycystic ovaries and hirsutism was higher (p < 0.01) than that of normal women although the ranges overlapped. Testosterone blood production rates averaged 830 ± 120 SE and 1,180 ± 310 SE μg per day in the two groups of hirsute women and 230 ± 33 SE μg per day in normal women. The ranges did not overlap.The testosterone metabolic clearance rates of hirsute women (1,090 ± 140 SE L per day) and of men (1,240 ± 136 SE L per day) were significantly higher than those of normal women (590 ± 44 SE L per day). These differences persisted when the metabolic clearance rates were corrected for surface area. We suggest that testosterone metabolic clearance rates vary directly with some function of testosterone production.The mean plasma androstenedione levels (2.8 ± 0.35 SE and 2.8 ± 0.30 SE μg per L) and production rates (6,060 ± 450 SE and 7,360 ± 345 SE μg per day) of the women with hirsutism or polycystic ovaries, respectively, were significantly higher than those of normal women (1.5 ± 0.22 SE μg per L; 3,300 ± 830 SE μg per day). The androstenedione metabolic clearance rates were the same in each group. Plasma androstenedione was the precursor of 49% of plasma testosterone in normal women and of 26% of plasma testosterone in hirsute women. Thus, 74% of the plasma testosterone in these subjects must have been either secreted or derived from a precursor that did not enter the plasma androstenedione pool.
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(22)
| Title and authors |
Publication |
Year |
PCOS Forum: research in polycystic ovary syndrome today and tomorrow
Renato Pasquali, Elisabet Stener-Victorin, Bulent O. Yildiz, Antoni J. Duleba, Kathleen Hoeger, Helen Mason, Roy Homburg, Theresa Hickey, Steve Franks, Juha S. Tapanainen, Adam Balen, David H. Abbott, Evanthia Diamanti-Kandarakis, Richard S. Legro
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Clinical Endocrinology
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2011 |
Determination of the source of androgen excess in functionally atypical polycystic ovary syndrome by a short dexamethasone androgen-suppression test and a low-dose ACTH test
R. L. Rosenfield, M. Mortensen, K. Wroblewski, E. Littlejohn, D. A. Ehrmann
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Human Reproduction
|
2011 |
Obesity differentially affects serum levels of androstenedione and testosterone in polycystic ovary syndrome
Carlos Moran, Jose L. Renteria, Segundo Moran, Joaquin Herrera, Sandra Gonzalez, Jose A. Bermudez
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Fertility and Sterility
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2008 |
Rational investigations in the diagnosis and management of women with hirsutism or androgenetic alopecia
J Barth
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Clinics in Dermatology
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2001 |
Spironolactone as a single agent for long-term therapy of hirsute patients
Poli Mara Spritzer, Karen O. Lisboa, Simone Mattiello, Francisco Lhullier
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Clin Endocrinol
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2000 |
Computerized assessment of facial hair growth
Doris M Gruber, Uwe E Berger, Michael O Sator, Friedrich Horak, Johannes C Huber
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Fertility and Sterility
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1999 |
Idiopathic hirsutism: an uncommon cause of hirsutism in Alabama
Ricardo Azziz, Wende T. Waggoner, Tatiana Ochoa, Eric S. Knochenhauer, Larry R. Boots
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Fertility and Sterility
|
1998 |
The Anabolic Action of Testosterone
C. Wayne Bardin
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N Engl J Med
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1996 |
Polycystic Ovary Syndrome
Stephen Franks
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N Engl J Med
|
1995 |
Changes of ovarian hormonal function with aging
Howard L. Judd, Nicole Fournet
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Experimental Gerontology
|
1994 |
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