Publication | Closed Access
Estrogen Receptors in Bone in a Patient with Polyostotic Fibrous Dysplasia (McCune-Albright Syndrome)
114
Citations
32
References
1988
Year
Estrogen ActsGynecologyPathologyFemale Reproductive FunctionOrthopaedic SurgeryOsteoporosisReproductive EndocrinologyBone DiseaseReproductive MedicineBone HomeostasisHealth SciencesPolyostotic Fibrous DysplasiaSkeletal BiologyEndocrinologyBone MetabolismOvarian HormoneOsteocalcinEstrogen ReceptorsProgesterone ReceptorsUterine ReceptivityMccune-albright SyndromeMenopauseMedicine
MOST investigators think that estrogen acts indirectly on bone,1 since direct skeletal action would require the presence of hormone-specific receptors in bone cells.2 , 3 However, recent advances in technology have resulted in a renewed effort to identify estrogen receptors in bone.We describe a patient with the classic McCune–Albright syndrome of sexual precocity, hyperpiglnented skin maculae, and cystic bone lesions.4 , 5 Our patient had rapid progression of two bone lesions during pregnancy. A study of these lesions revealed the presence of estrogen and progesterone receptors in osteogenic cells — a finding relevant to a possible direct action of estrogen on human bone . . .
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