02 May 2009

Intersexuality



Intersexuality

* Understanding Intersex
* Gender Identity: Nature vs. Nurture
* The Ethical Questions
* Discussion
* Papers


An advance warning

* For anyone who has done the reading, this will not come as a shock, but we will be discussing sex and gender today.
* Some of the video clips depict surgeries and genitals (sometimes blurred, sometimes not).
Understanding Intersex

* Simplest definition: intersex is a congenital anomaly of the reproductive and sexual system.
* There are many differences between those who are intersexed. It is difficult to point to any set of characteristics of intersexuality, though the most common characteristic is ambiguous genitalia.

A word on language…

* Hermaphrodite vs. Intersex
* “true hermaphrodites” in a medical context

Ambiguous Genitalia

* Generally, this is what tips off medical staff to the possibility of a newborn being intersexed.
* Quite simply, this is when the reproductive organs do not present themselves as they usually do. This can be because of the size or shape of the genitals.

Androgen-Insensitivity syndrome (AIS)

* Also known as “testicular feminization.”
* Though the genes read as XY, the androgen receptors in the body cannot “read” the masculinizing hormones the testes produce. Because of this, these “male” children's anatomy both in utero and after birth develop in a “feminized” manner.
* Often not discovered until puberty, when menstruation does not occur.

Progestin Induced Virilization

* Progestin was a drug administered to women in the 1950s and 60s to help prevent miscarriages.
* The drug would be converted to androgen by the prenatal XX child, which could result in the “masculinization” of the child. Possible side effects are enlarged clitoris, development of a phallus, and/or the fusing of the labia.

Progestin Induced Virilization

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Medical Genetics



Medical Genetics

Presentation lecture by:Dennis Anderson
Oklahoma City Community College
Human Anatomy and Physiology II
Mitosis

* Produces daughter cells with 46 chromosomes
* Used in growth and repair
* DNA is duplicated
* Doubled chromosomes form from duplicated DNA
* Each cms has 2 identical chromatids

Chromatid
Mitosis Metaphase
Chromosomes separate
Meiosis
Chromosomes line up in a double row.
Each each daughter cell gets doubled chromosomes
Double Filed Chromosomes
Gene
Allele
Dwarfism = D
Normal height = d
DD = Dwarfism
Dd = Dwarfism
dd = Normal height
Examples of Alleles
Dwarf Band

Dominant & Recessive Alleles
Homozygous
Heterozygous
Genotype
Phenotype
Codominant
Karyotype
Homologous Chromosomes
Mutation
Mutagen
Agent that causes mutations
Cigarette smoke
Pesticides
X-rays
Ulatraviolet light
Nuclear radiation
Homologous Pairs Separate
Fertilization
Nondisjunction
Trisomy
Sex Chromosomes
Autosomes
Chromosomes 1-22
X-Linked Traits
Normal Male
Normal Female
Trisomy 21
Down Syndrome

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Male and Female Genitalia



Male and Female Genitalia
Presentation Lecture by Jennifer Coleman, Assistant Professor of Nursing
Arkansas Tech University.

* Health Assessment

Common Chief Complaints
* Urethral discharge
* Palpable mass
* Erectile dysfunction
* Penile lesion
* Scrotal pain

Inspection

* Hair distribution
* Urethral meatus
o Location, discharge
* Inguinal area
o Bulges, masses
* Penis
o Size, shape, lesions, swelling, inflammation
* Scrotum
o Size, shape, lesions, inflammation, swelling, nodules
Inspect the Glans and Urethral Meatus
* Compress meatus
o Check for proper positioning of urethral opening
o Check for drainage – urethral culture
* Skin pink and smooth
Transillumination

* Light from behind scrotum
* Normal - Does not transilluminate
* Hernia – Pink or red glow
* Hydrospadias - Translucent

Palpation

* Penis
o Assess for tenderness, pulsations, masses
* Urethral meatus
o Assess for discharge
* Scrotum
o Assess for masses, tenderness, spermatic cord
* Inguinal area
o Assess for hernias

Inspect and palpate the scrotum

* Patient holds penis out of the way
* Note skin, lumps, nodes
* Testes: slide easily, oval, firm, movable
* Epididymis: feels discrete, softer than testis, smooth

Auscultation

* Not routinely done, but can add to assessment findings
* Scrotum
* Abnormal findings
o Presence of bowel sounds may indicate indirect inguinal hernia

Abnormal Finding Examples

* Hypospadias and Epispadias
* Penile lesions and Urethral discharge
* Hydrocele, Spermatocele, Empty scrotal half, Acute Orchitis, Scrotal Edema, Torsion of the cord, Acute epidymitis, Testis Tumor
* Hernias
* Alopecia, Lice or nits present

Hypospadias

* Urethral meatus open on ventral (under) side of glans, shaft or penoscrotal junction
* Do not circumcise until surgically corrected

Epispadias

* Meatus opens on dorsal (upper) side of glans or shaft
* Less common than hypospadias

Syphilitic Chancre

* Silver, small papule - erodes to red ulcer with yellow, serous discharge
* Nontender base
* Lymph nodes enlarged & nontender

Genital Herpes

* Clusters of small vesicles, surrounding erythema
* Often painful, erupt to superficial ulcers
* 1st infection lasts 7-10 days
* Virus remains dormant indefinitely
* Recurrent infection lasts 3-10 days

Genital Warts

* Warts
* Painless, grapelike clusters
* May look like skin tags
* One of the most common STD’s

Carcinoma of Penis

* Red, raised warty growth or an ulcer with watery discharge
* Necrose and slough
* Usually painless
* Usually on glans
* Lymph nodes commonly enlarged

Hydrocele

* Painless swelling
* Enlarged mass, transilluminates translucent
* Communicating vs. noncommunicating (intermittent or constant bulge)
* Common <2 y.o. - often disappears spontaneously

Spermatocele

* Cyst in epididymis (generally small)
* Painless
* Does transilluminate
* round, freely moveable (may feel like a third testis)

Empty scrotal half

* True cryptorchidism – testes never descended
* Physiologic cryptorchidism - absence of testis in scrotum, but can be milked down
* 3-4% at birth, most will descend in 1st mo. (much higher percentage with prematurity)
* Decrease spermatogenesis to infertile by 6 yrs.

Acute Orchitis

* Acute inflammation of testis – most commonly from the mumps
* Pain – sudden onset, swollen testis, fever
* Potential for infertility

Scrotal Edema

* Usually occurs with systemic edema (CHF, renal failure)
* Also with local inflammation
* Tenderness, reddened, taut with pitting

Torsion of the cord

* Sudden twisting of the spermatic cord
* Rare after 20 y.o.
* Usually on left side
* Blood supply is cut off – ischemia and engorgement - very painful
* Emergency – requires surgery
* Cremasteric reflex absent

Acute epidymitis

* Acute infection of epidiymis
* Severe pain of sudden onset, rapid swelling and fever
* Reddened scrotum
* WBCs and bacteria in urine

Testis Tumor

* Usually painless lump
* Increase in local nodes common

Hernia

* Internal anatomy of inguinal hernia
* Loop of bowel protruding through weak muscle
* Possible pain
* Swelling
* May be congenital or acquired

Palpate for hernia

* Inguinal canal
* Ask patient to “bear down”
* Nl: feel no change
* Abnl: feel mass bump into/push against side of your finger

Newborn

* Scrotum pink with rugae (preterm will have smooth scrotum)
* Cremastric reflex strong
* Check for undescended testes, hydrocele, inguinal bulge

Pediatric Considerations

* Circumcision is considered a personal/cultural/religious decision by parents (~70-80% in US)
* Start TSE at ~13-14 years of age
* Undescended testicles increase risk of cancer
* Do not retract foreskin 1st 3 months d/t risk of tearing membrane

Developmental Considerations

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