pregnanetriolone and 17-hydroxypregnanolone

pregnanetriolone has been researched along with 17-hydroxypregnanolone* in 2 studies

Other Studies

2 other study(ies) available for pregnanetriolone and 17-hydroxypregnanolone

ArticleYear
Detection of late onset steroid 21-hydroxylase deficiency by capillary gas chromatographic profiling of urinary steroids in children and adolescents.
    European journal of pediatrics, 1988, Volume: 147, Issue:3

    Patients suffering from late onset 21-hydroxylase deficiency (LO-CAH) excreted only slightly higher amounts of 17-hydroxypregnanolone (17-OH-PO), pregnanetriol (PT) and 11-oxo-pregnanetriol (11-O-PT) than age-matched healthy controls. To discriminate between LO-CAH and virilization of unknown origin and precocious pubarche, we calculated the following ratios: (1) pregnanetriol to tetrahydrocortisone (PT/THE), (2) the sum of 17-OH-PO, PT and 11-O-PT (OHP-M) to the sum of THE, tetrahydrocortisol (THF) and allotetrahydrocortisol (a-THF) (C-M) and (3) 11-O-PT to C-M. The following patients were studied: 9 patients with congenital adrenal hyperplasia due to 21-hydroxylase deficiency-non-salt losing (CAH-NSL), never treated; 8 patients with CAH (NSL/SL: 3/5) off treatment; 10 patients with LO-CAH; 11 patients with virilization of unknown origin (prepubertal/pubertal: 5/6) and 9 patients with precocious pubarche. Healthy individuals and obligatory heterozygote carriers of comparable ages served as controls. LO-CAH showed increased ratios (median (range] of PT/THE: 2.27, (1.15-9.09), OHP-M/C-M: 2.30, (1.24-8.15), and 11-O-PT/C-M: 0.24, (0.13-1.23) compared to healthy individuals and heterozygous carriers: PT/THE 0.28, (0.03-0.57), OHP-M/C-M 0.23, (0.06-0.46) and 11-O-PT/C-M less than 0.01, (less than 0.01-0.06), respectively. The calculation of ratios, rather than absolute amounts seems to allow the detection of LO-CAH in a single spontaneously voided urine specimen. The clinical and measurable hormonal manifestations of LO-CAH occur at the same time.

    Topics: Adolescent; Adrenal Hyperplasia, Congenital; Adult; Child; Child, Preschool; Chromatography, Gas; Female; Humans; Infant; Male; Pregnanes; Pregnanetriol; Pregnanolone; Puberty, Precocious; Steroid Hydroxylases; Tetrahydrocortisol; Virilism

1988
The diagnosis of 21-hydroxylase deficiency in a prematurely born infant on the basis of the urinary steroid excretion pattern.
    Clinica chimica acta; international journal of clinical chemistry, 1982, Apr-23, Volume: 120, Issue:3

    The urine of a 6-day-old prematurely born female infant (birth weight 1060 g) suspected of having a 21-OH-deficiency showed no steroid abnormalities on capillary GLC analysis. Using GC-MS tetrahydrocortisone (THE) and also 3 alpha, 17 alpha-dihydroxy-5 beta-pregnane-20-one (17-OH-Polone) were absent, but two androstanetriolone peaks were observed. In the urine collected on day 9 THE was absent, but a large amount of 3 alpha, 11 beta-dihydroxy-5-alpha-androstane-17-one (11-HA) was found by GC-MS to be contaminated by a small amount of 17-OH-Polone. The next urine specimen collected on the 22nd day while the child received cortisol therapeutically showed the characteristic steroid profile for the diagnosis 21-OH deficiency, large peaks of 17-OH-Polone, pregnanetriol (P3) and 11-keto-pregnanetriol (11-keto-P3). Over the next few weeks two other compounds were found to have been excreted in relatively large amounts, 3 xi, 16 xi, 17 xi, 20 xi-pregnanetetrol (16-OH-P3) and surprisingly also a 21-hydroxylated compound, namely 3 xi, 20 alpha, 21-trihydroxy-5-pregnene. These same two compounds were also found in the urine of another infant with suspected 21-OH deficiency. The urinary steroid excretion patterns characteristic for 21-OH deficiency are dependent on the maturity and age of the infant. In the prematurely born infant androstanetriolones appear in the urine before 17-OH-Polone. The occurrence of these different steroid excretion patterns is tentatively explained.

    Topics: Adrenal Hyperplasia, Congenital; Aging; Androstanes; Chromatography, Gas; Female; Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry; Humans; Hydrocortisone; Infant, Newborn; Infant, Premature; Male; Pregnanes; Pregnanetriol; Pregnanolone; Pregnenes; Steroid Hydroxylases; Steroids; Tetrahydrocortisone

1982