hrp0089p3-p357 | Sex Differentiation, Gonads and Gynaecology or Sex Endocrinology P3 | ESPE2018

A Case of Transverse Testicular Ectopia with Persistant Müllerian Duct Syndrome: A Novel AMH Gene Mutation

Kılınc Suna , Cicek Tuğrul , Moralıoğlu Serdar , Guven Ayla

Background: The concurrence of transverse testicular ectopia (TTE) with persistent müllerian duct syndrome (PMDS) is extremely rare. Here, we report a case of TTE with PMDS in a 7-month-old male infant presenting with inguinal hernia and a novel homozygous mutation in the AMH gene. CASE REPORT: A 7-month-old male infant presented to pediatric surgery department with an inguinal hernia on the left side and bilateral undescended testis. During left herniotomy, tiss...

hrp0086con1.4 | Challenges in the Management of DSD | ESPE2016

An Ethicist’s Viewpoint

Wiesemann Clsssaudia

Decisions for children not able to consent must aim at promoting the well-being of the child and future adult and minimize physical and psychosocial risks. In atypical sex development, well-being is a complex category comprising physical and psychosocial health (present as well as long-term). The child has a right to a gendered identity, bodily integrity, fertility, quality of life including sexual life, and mental health. However, patient well-being is a normative concept and...

hrp0084wg6.2 | Turner Syndrome | ESPE2015

The Challenges of Prenatal Diagnosis: The Experience of a Supportive Group for Parents of Children with TS

Foresti Maura

Background: Prenatal diagnostics (PND), as any achievement in genetic research, brings ethical and moral dilemmas that need to be a subject of reflection and debate in modern societies.Objective and hypotheses: Once the expecting parents have undergone PND, data about abnormalities confront them with moral dilemmas regarding the decision on the life or death of the unborn child, the responsibility for it, and possible suffering during its future life. Ps...

hrp0086con1.3 | Challenges in the Management of DSD | ESPE2016

Psychological Challenges

D'Alberton Franco

The new care paradigm for DSD promoted by the Chicago Consensus of 2005 raised many psychological challenges, the most important being the way decisions regarding the sex of rearing and diagnosis communication are made. The traditional care paradigm, sustained by a binary sex categorization, suggested that for newborns, the decision about the sex of rearing should be made as soon as possible and no later than 18 months of life and that little should be said to the involved per...