Find information on thousands of medical conditions and prescription drugs.

Klinefelter's Syndrome

Klinefelter's syndrome is a condition caused by a chromosome nondisjunction in males; affected individuals have a pair of X sex chromosomes instead of just one. It is named after Dr. Harry Klinefelter, a medical researcher at Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, who first described this condition in 1942, and is associated with additional risk for some medical conditions. more...

Home
Diseases
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
Kallmann syndrome
Kallmann syndrome
Kallmann syndrome
Kallmann syndrome
Kaposi sarcoma
Karsch Neugebauer syndrome
Kartagener syndrome
Kawasaki syndrome
Kearns-Sayre syndrome
Keloids
Kennedy disease
Keratoacanthoma
Keratoconjunctivitis sicca
Keratoconus
Keratomalacia
Keratosis pilaris
Kernicterus
Kikuchi disease
Klinefelter's Syndrome
Klippel Trenaunay Weber...
Klippel-Feil syndrome
Klumpke paralysis
Kluver-Bucy syndrome
Kniest dysplasia
Kocher-Debré-Semélaigne...
Kohler disease
Korsakoff's syndrome
Kostmann syndrome
Kyphosis
Seborrheic keratosis
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
X
Y
Z
Medicines

Cause

The XXY chromosome arrangement is one of the most common genetic variations from the XY karyotype, occurring in about 1 in 1,000 male births. Because of the extra chromosome, individuals with the condition are usually referred to as "XXY Males", or "47,XXY Males" rather than as "suffering from Klinefelter's syndrome."

In mammals with more than one X chromosome, the genes on all but one X chromosome are barred from being expressed. This happens in XXY males as well as XX females. A few genes, however, have corresponding genes on the Y chromosome and are not barred. These triploid genes in XXY males may be responsible for symptoms associated with Klinefelter's syndrome.

Signs and symptoms

XXY males are almost always infertile, and some degree of language impairment may be present. In adults, possible characteristics vary widely and include little to no signs of affectedness, a lanky, youthful build and facial appearance, or a rounded body type with some degree of gynecomastia (increased male breast tissue). Gynecomastia to some extent is present in about a third of individuals affected, a higher percentage than in the XY population. The far end of the spectrum is also associated with an increased risk of breast cancer, pulmonary disease, varicose veins, and osteoporosis, risks shared with women.

Rare X-linked recessive problems occur even more infrequently in XXY males, since these conditions are transmitted by genes on the X chromosome, and people with two X chromosomes are typically carriers rather than affected.

There are many variances within the XXY, (otherwise known as 47,XXY) population, just like in the 46,XY population. While it is possible to characterise 47,XXY males with certain body types, that in itself should not be the method of identification as to whether someone has 47,XXY or not. The only method of identification is karyotype testing.

The condition was identified in 1942 by Klinefelter in Boston. The cause was not found until the 1950s.

Treatment

The condition is irreversible, but its symptoms can be altered in a number of ways, including testosterone treatment and other therapies.

While the gender identity of people with XXY karyotype is generally stable, the number of people with gender identity disorder among the whole seems to be higher than could statistically be expected if those cases were indeed, as the current medical opinion assesses, mere coincidences of people having both gender identity disorder and Klinefelter's independently from each other. The observation on gender identity is based on the reports of support groups for transgender and transsexual people; no scientific study on this subject has been done. The fact that a person undergoing treatment for gender identity disorder has Klinefelter's syndrome is often missed, or the patient is not told, although in many jurisdictions this additional diagnosis can have legal consequences, for example regarding name change or medical treatment having to be adapted.

Read more at Wikipedia.org


[List your site here Free!]


Mammograms for men? breast cancer is not just a woman's disease
From Psychology Today, 9/1/03 by Willow Lawson

MOST MEN DON'T THINK THEY CAN GET breast cancer. Yet this year, an expected 1,300 males will be diagnosed with it and some 400 will die.

The diagnosis usually comes as a shock. "Breast cancer is the last thing they are thinking about," says Sharon Giordano, M.D., an epidemiologist at The University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston. She recently completed the largest study of breast cancer in men. Even physicians and nurses who treat breast cancer expect the patient to be a woman. "They're always called Mrs. Jones when they're sitting in the waiting room," says Giordano.

Male breast cancer is rare, accounting for only about I percent of cases each year. But men tend to have larger tumors and more serious cases than women even though male cancer is more easily detected. Researchers don't know if that's because male breast cancer is more aggressive or because men simply go to the doctor later than women.

There's reason to believe that risks related to male breast cancer differ significantly from those associated with the disease in women. For females, major factors include family history, lifetime exposure to hormones, and age at various biological milestones such as first menstrual period, childbirth and menopause.

Although many tumors in men are "hormonally driven" (and can be treated after surgery with hormone blockers like tamoxifen, a drug widely used in women), male breast cancer largely afflicts men older than 65 and is very rare in young men. It is associated with breast and testicular abnormalities, infertility and Klinefelter's syndrome, a genetic abnormality in which men have one or more extra X chromosomes. Klinefelter's syndrome is often marked by gynecomastia, an enlargement of the breast tissue, which Giordano says may also turn out to be a risk factor.

Does this mean men should get mammograms? Considering the low risk for males in general, a self-exam is probably enough, says Giordano, because lumps are more easily felt on a man's chest. Men can also get genetic tests to screen for risks such as the BRAC2 gene, a known risk factor for men and women. Giordano offers the testing to all her patients. male or female. According to her, "Men who have children, especially daughters, are more likely to want to be tested" in hopes of giving their kids a head start detecting the disease.

COPYRIGHT 2003 Sussex Publishers, Inc.
COPYRIGHT 2004 Gale Group

Return to Klinefelter's Syndrome
Home Contact Resources Exchange Links ebay