Women with PCOS and their siblings with hormone problems have same gene defect Women with PCOS and their siblings with hormone problems have same gene defect
446 words
14 September 2002
Obesity, Fitness & Wellness Week
9
English
(c) Copyright 2002 Obesity, Fitness & Wellness Week via NewsRx.com
2002 SEP 14 - (NewsRx.com & NewsRx.net) -- Siblings of women with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) have metabolic and hormonal abnormalities that are linked to the same gene defect that causes PCOS, a disorder associated with irregular periods, infertility, excessive body hair and increased risk for diabetes.
These new findings came from the $6 million National Institutes of Health-funded National Centers Program for Infertility Research. The study was led by Northwestern University researcher Andrea Dunaif, MD, Charles F. Kettering Professor, chief of endocrinology and metabolism and professor of medicine at he Feinberg School of Medicine, and collaborators at Pennsylvania State University and the University of Pennsylvania.
Dunaif and coinvestigators believe the location of the PCOS gene mutation is on chromosome 19, near the insulin receptor gene, which plays a key role in allowing insulin to enter cells and metabolize sugar. This marker, called allele 8 of D19S884, was associated with risk factors for diabetes in PCOS women and their brothers.
In recently published studies, approximately 50% of the sisters of PCOS women had elevated androgen (so-called "male hormones" that are present in both men and women) levels while the other half of the sisters were unaffected. Of the high-androgen group, half (or 25% of the sisters) had PCOS and insulin resistance, while the other 25% were insulin resistant but showed no PCOS symptoms and had normal menstrual periods.
The PCOS sisters and those with high androgen levels were more obese than unaffected sisters.
The PCOS brothers also had significantly elevated levels of the androgen DHEAS, which correlated with the high androgen levels in their sisters with PCOS.
These results strongly suggest that the same gene defect is responsible for PCOS and the hormonal abnormalities and other symptoms found in the siblings of PCOS-affected women, but further studies are required, Dunaif said.
PCOS is a complex disorder that affects nearly 10% of premenopausal women and is associated with elevated levels of androgens, as well as irregular menstrual periods and reproductive problems. Other symptoms of PCOS include obesity, excess hair on the face and body, male-pattern baldness and severe, chronic acne.
Many women with PCOS are insulin-resistant. In fact, women with PCOS have seven times the risk of other women for developing adult-onset diabetes, which in turn greatly increases their chance of having cardiovascular disease, stroke and kidney problems. Dunaif's research also has shown that PCOS is an important risk factor for the adult form of diabetes in teenage girls.
This article was prepared by Obesity, Fitness & Wellness Week editors from staff and other reports
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