Figure 3 - available via license: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International
Content may be subject to copyright.
Gonad showing epididymis with fallopian tube (H and E, ×4). Figure 4: The left gonad showing fallopian tube (H and E, ×10).
Source publication
The disorders of sex development (DSD) are uncommon and have wide phenotypic variation. Due to this, they often cannot be classified properly and go unreported. This case is an 18-month-old child with penoscrotal hypospadias with bilateral undescended testes. The karyotyping was 46 XY. Serum testosterone and progesterone were normal. Histopathologi...
Context in source publication
Context 1
... cells were scattered in the interstitium in between the seminiferous tubules while the left gonadal tissue did not reveal any testicular tissue and showed only fallopian tube. The left Mullerian structures showed epididymis along with a fragment of fallopian tube placed adjacent to epididymis [ Figures 3 and 4]. No Mullerian structures were identified on the right side. ...
Similar publications
Introduction:
Persistent Mullerian duct syndrome (PMDS) is a rare type of male pseudohermaphroditism. Transverse testicular ectopia (TTE) is characterized by one testis moving to the opposite side and both testes traversing the same inguinal canal.
Case presentation:
An 11-month-old boy presented with bilateral cryptorchidism. The left testis wa...
Persistent Müllerian duct syndrome (PMDS) is a rare type of male pseudohermaphroditism caused by a deficiency in anti-Müllerian hormone (AMH) or a defect in its type II receptor. The current study reports the clinical data and results of the genetic analysis of a 17-month-old male diagnosed with PMDS. The clinical manifestations of the patient incl...