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DOI: 10.1590/S0004-27302005000100008
Gonadal dysgenesis comprises a clinical spectrum of anomalies in patients with female, ambiguous or male phenotype, absent or impaired puberty and karyotype with or without Y chromosome and/or chromosome markers. Although Y-specific sequences are seldom cytogenetically evident, dysgenetic gonads are potentially prone to developing tumors. Gonadoblastoma, a mixed germ cell and sex-cord cells tumor with variable degree of focal calcification, is the most harmful due to its frequency. Other gonadal tumor, maligns or not, also occur in gonadal dysgenesis. As […]
Keywords: Gonadal dysgenesis; Gonadal tumor; Gonadoblastoma; Sexual differentiation