Belisle S, Lehoux J G, Benard B, Ainmelk Y
Obstet Gynecol. 1981 Jun;57(6 Suppl):70S-5S.
A 36-year-old patient with secondary amenorrhea and progressive frank virilization was found by histologic examination to have ovarian hyperthecosis. Baseline androgenic investigation revealed a selective increase in testosterone (T) production rate (3.1 mg/day), which was associated with an increase in both plasma T concentration (total and unbound) and metabolic clearance rate (MCR) of T (2156 liters/day). There was a marked concentration gradient for circulating plasma T between each ovarian vein and the peripheral veins (right ovarian, 50 ng/ml; left ovarian, 21 ng/ml). After bilateral wedge resection there was a rapid decrease in the total and unbound T levels as well as in the MCR of T, which remained normal for at least 6 months. By then the patient had stopped shaving and was menstruating normally. In vitro incubation studies of fragments from each ovary revealed incorporation of [3H]-dehydroepiandrosterone and [3H]-progesterone into [3H]-T in the range reported for normal human ovarian stroma, and short-term cellular culture suggested a normal morphology and steroidogenesis. It is concluded that in this patient with ovarian hyperthecosis, the observed ovarian T production resulted more from an increase in the amount of stromal-thecal tissue than from a functional biochemical defect in the latter.