Tests Regarding Sex Hormones

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To measure levels of estrogen, progesterone, and testosterone.


Contents

edit edit Estrogen fraction test

Principle

Method

  1. blood sample drawn from arm’s vein OR
  1. 24-hour urine sample collected OR
  1. fresh saliva sample collected in a plastic tube

Purpose


edit edit Progesterone assay test (EIA kit)

Principle

Method

  1. blocking reagent is used to displace progesterone from serum binding proteins; and are then bound by monoclonal anti-progesterone antibody
  2. complexes are isolated by adsorbtion to magnetic anti-mouse IgG
  3. unoccupied anti-progesterone sites bound by alkaline phosphatase
  4. coloured enzyme substrate added (complexes with alkaline phosphatase colour change from yellow to pink)
  5. optical density measured using spectrophotometer or colorimeter

Purpose


edit edit Total Testosterone Test

Method

Purpose


edit edit SHBG Test

Principle

Method

Purpose


edit edit Possible reasons for abnormal results

Levels of Men Women
Decreased Increased Decreased Increased
Estrogen (in blood) Normal Men: 12-34 pg/ml; Women: 24-149 pg/ml male begins to develop female secondary sex characteristics; testicular or adrenal tumor failing pregnancy; menopause; anorexia nervosa; primary and secondary hypogonadism; turner's syndrome early puberty; develop secondary sexual characteristics at an abnormally early age; ovarian or adrenal tumor; in normal pregnancy; cirrhosis; and increased thyroid levels (hyperthyroidism)
Progesterone (in blood) Women: 150 - 2,000 ng/dl; In pregnancy 1,500 - 20,000 ng/dL toxemia of pregnancy; threatened abortion; placental failure; after fetal death; amenorrhea; ovarian dysfunction ovulation and pregnancy; certain types of ovarian cysts; tumor of the ovary known as a choriocarcinoma
Testosterone Men: 300 - 1,200 ng/dL; Boys: < 100 ng/dL; Women: 30-95 ng/dL; Girls < 40 ng/dL Klinefelter syndrome; primary and secondary hypogonadism; surgical removal of the testicles; Down syndrome; cirrhosis early puberty; viral infection of encephalitis; tumors involving adrenal glands; testicular tumors; excessive thyroid production (hyperthyroidism); testosterone resistance syndromes ovarian and adrenal tumors and in the presence of excessive hair growth of unknown cause (hirsutism)

edit edit References

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