## Correct Answer: B. Premature ovarian insufficiency (POI) Premature ovarian insufficiency (POI) is diagnosed when a woman under 40 years presents with secondary amenorrhea and biochemical evidence of ovarian failure. The key discriminating findings here are **elevated FSH (36 IU/L, well above 10 IU/L)** and **markedly reduced AMH (0.05 ng/mL, normal >1.0 ng/mL)**. FSH elevation reflects loss of negative feedback due to declining ovarian estrogen production, while AMH (anti-Müllerian hormone) is the most sensitive marker of ovarian reserve—a value <0.5 ng/mL indicates severely depleted primordial follicles. This 36-year-old woman meets the diagnostic criteria: age <40, amenorrhea ≥4 months, and two elevated FSH levels (or one FSH >40 IU/L). POI affects 1–2% of women in India and can be idiopathic, autoimmune, or iatrogenic. Management includes hormone replacement therapy (HRT) for cardiovascular and bone protection, and counseling on reduced fertility (though spontaneous pregnancy remains possible in ~5–10% of cases). The combination of high FSH and low AMH is pathognomonic for ovarian failure. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Hypothalamic amenorrhea** — Hypothalamic amenorrhea (functional hypothalamic amenorrhea) presents with **low or normal FSH** and **normal or low LH**, reflecting suppressed GnRH secretion. The markedly elevated FSH (36 IU/L) rules this out—it indicates the pituitary is functioning normally but the ovary is not responding. Hypothalamic amenorrhea is typically reversible with weight gain or stress reduction; POI is not. NBE trap: students may confuse any secondary amenorrhea with hypothalamic cause without checking FSH levels. **C. Hyperprolactinemia** — Hyperprolactinemia causes amenorrhea by suppressing GnRH pulsatility, resulting in **low FSH and LH**. This patient has markedly elevated FSH, which is incompatible with hyperprolactinemia. Additionally, hyperprolactinemia often presents with galactorrhea and breast symptoms, not mentioned here. The high FSH indicates primary ovarian pathology, not secondary hypogonadism from prolactin excess. **D. Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)** — PCOS presents with **low-normal or low FSH** (typically 3–8 IU/L) and **elevated LH**, creating an elevated LH:FSH ratio (>2:1 or 3:1). AMH is typically elevated in PCOS (>4 ng/mL) due to increased number of small follicles. This patient has the opposite pattern: very high FSH and very low AMH. PCOS is a disorder of ovulation, not ovarian reserve depletion. The biochemistry here is diagnostic of ovarian failure, not PCOS. ## High-Yield Facts - **POI diagnostic criteria**: age <40 years, amenorrhea ≥4 months, and elevated FSH (>10 IU/L on two occasions ≥4 weeks apart, or single FSH >40 IU/L). - **AMH <0.5 ng/mL** indicates severely depleted ovarian reserve; normal AMH >1.0 ng/mL. AMH is the most sensitive marker of follicle pool. - **FSH >10 IU/L** in secondary amenorrhea indicates primary ovarian failure; low FSH suggests hypothalamic or pituitary cause. - **POI affects 1–2% of women** in reproductive age; can be idiopathic, autoimmune (associated with thyroid disease, Addison's), or iatrogenic (chemotherapy, radiation). - **HRT is first-line management** in POI for cardiovascular and bone protection; fertility counseling essential as spontaneous pregnancy occurs in 5–10%. - **LH:FSH ratio** is normal or low in POI (unlike PCOS where LH:FSH >2:1); this helps differentiate from PCOS. ## Mnemonics **POI vs PCOS: FSH & AMH** **POI**: High FSH, Low AMH (ovarian failure). **PCOS**: Low FSH, High AMH (ovulation disorder). Remember: POI = **F**ailure (FSH ↑), PCOS = **F**ollicles (AMH ↑). **Amenorrhea Differential by FSH** **High FSH** = primary ovarian (POI). **Low FSH** = secondary (hypothalamic, pituitary, hyperprolactinemia). **Normal FSH, high LH** = PCOS. FSH is your first filter. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs "secondary amenorrhea" with "hypothalamic cause" to trap students who reflexively choose hypothalamic amenorrhea without checking FSH levels. The elevated FSH is the discriminator that must be recognized to avoid this trap. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian clinical practice, POI is increasingly recognized as a cause of secondary amenorrhea in women presenting to gynecology OPD. Early diagnosis via FSH and AMH allows timely HRT initiation to prevent osteoporosis and cardiovascular disease—critical in a population with high prevalence of early menopause. Fertility counseling should emphasize that spontaneous pregnancy is still possible, and assisted reproductive techniques may be considered. _Reference: DC Dutta's Textbook of Obstetrics Ch. 10 (Amenorrhea); Harrison Ch. 340 (Reproductive Endocrinology)_
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