NURS 6501 – Week 10 Case Study
Women’s & Men’s Health: Hormonal Disruption Across Sexes
Important Case Instruction
No laboratory or imaging data are provided. Your analysis must be based solely on the patients’ clinical
presentation and underlying pathophysiology.
Assignment Overview
In this case study, you will analyze sex-based differences in disease presentation and progression
with a specific focus on hormonal disruption across the lifespan. Hormones play a critical role in
musculoskeletal health, metabolic regulation, neurologic function, mood stability, and sexual health.
Disruption of hormonal balance whether gradual or surgically induced, can result in multisystem
symptoms that are frequently misinterpreted as normal aging, psychiatric conditions, or degenerative
disease.
This assignment requires you to apply advanced pathophysiology concepts to two patients of the same
age but different sex, comparing how hormonal changes uniquely influence symptom development,
disease risk, and diagnostic interpretation in women and men. Emphasis should be placed on
understanding how abrupt estrogen loss and androgen deficiency affect physiologic functioning,
contribute to diagnostic confusion, and increase long-term health risk.
You will critically evaluate the patients’ clinical presentations to:
• Explain the primary pathophysiological processes driving symptom development
• Analyze the role of genetic, hormonal, and reproductive factors in disease susceptibility
• Examine how sex-based assumptions, lifestyle factors, and diagnostic bias influence outcomes
This assignment is designed to strengthen your ability to synthesize complex clinical information,
distinguish hormonal pathology from normal aging, and recognize how sex-specific physiology
influences disease expression.
UNIFIED CASE STUDY SCENARIO
Students, this is not a separate case but a single integrated case identifying:
• Same age > controls for aging
• Different sex > highlights hormonal physiology
• Abrupt estrogen loss versus gradual androgen decline
• Shared misattribution (“aging,” “stress”) which is why cardiology risk factors for male and
female are over generalized for the female (stress versus cardiac risk factors)
• Different downstream risks (fracture versus muscle loss)
Paired Patients: Sex-Based Hormonal Disruption
This case involves two patients of the same age presenting with overlapping yet sex-specific symptoms
related to hormonal disruption. The comparison highlights how endocrine changes manifest differently in
women and men and how these differences influence diagnosis, diagnostic bias (failure to recognize
underlying pathology), and disease progression.
PATIENT A – FEMALE
Name: Ms. J.S.
Age: 46 years
Sex: Female
Ms. J.S. presents with progressive fatigue, diffuse joint and bone pain, hair thinning, mood instability,
cognitive fog, decreased libido, and worsening musculoskeletal discomfort over the past 18 months.
Gynecologic & STD History
At age 44, she underwent a total hysterectomy with bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy (TAH-BSO) for
severe endometriosis and persistent high-risk HPV with recurrent abnormal cervical cytology. She was
not started on hormone replacement therapy due to concerns about malignancy risk.
Post-Surgical Symptom Progression
Since surgery, she reports:
• Hot flashes and night sweats
• Vaginal dryness and dyspareunia
• Rapid weight gain
• Hair thinning at temples and crown
• Morning stiffness and diffuse joint pain
• Deep bone pain in hips and wrists
She reports being told her symptoms were “normal aging,” “depression,” or “early osteoarthritis.”
Near-Miss Outcome
Six months ago, Ms. J.S. sustained a low-impact wrist fracture after a minor fall. No further evaluation
was pursued.
She expresses concern that her hair loss may be autoimmune in origin.
PATIENT B – MALE COMPARATOR
Name: Mr. K.S.
Age: 46 years
Sex: Male
Mr. K.S. presents with chronic fatigue, decreased libido, erectile difficulty, depressed mood, reduced
muscle mass, increased central adipose, and joint aches over the past year. He was currently promoted to
CEO of a well known pharmaceutical company.
He reports:
• Reduced motivation and exercise tolerance
• Gradual weight gain
• Joint pain attributed to “getting older”
Social & Health Context
• Former competitive athlete
• Sedentary lifestyle due to fatigue
• High occupational stress
• No history of nicotine use, vaping or alcohol use
He delayed seeking care, stating:
“Men are supposed to just push through.”
CASE STUDY QUESTIONS (RUBRIC-ALIGNED) – Thoughts to consider in your writings for the
content – however, follow the entire rubric.
Rubric Criterion 1 – Primary Pathophysiological Processes (30 points)
Rubric language:
“Develop a case study analysis examining patient signs and symptoms. Discuss the primary
pathophysiological processes and their significance for symptom development and diagnosis”
1. Compare and contrast the primary pathophysiological mechanisms underlying Patient A’s and
Patient B’s symptoms.
2. Explain how sex-specific hormonal disruption (estrogen deficiency vs androgen deficiency)
contributes to:
o Musculoskeletal pain
o Mood and cognitive changes
o Sexual dysfunction
3. Identify the most likely underlying disease processes in each patient and justify your reasoning.
Rubric Criterion 2 – Genetics and Risk Factors (30 points)
Rubric language:
“Describe the role genetic mutations play in the development of the disease and the risk factors that make
the patient more susceptible”
1. Discuss how genetic, hormonal, and reproductive factors influence disease susceptibility in both
patients.
2. Compare how surgical menopause and androgen decline alter long-term health risks.
3. Explain how Patient A’s HPV history and surgical management influenced her current risk
profile.
Rubric Criterion 3 – Racial/Ethnic Variables AND History/Lifestyle (25 points)
Rubric language:
“Explain any racial/ethnic variables that may impact physiological functioning AND explain factors in
the patient’s history and lifestyle that could have contributed to the development of the disease process”
1. Analyze how diagnostic bias and sex-based assumptions affected symptom interpretation and
care in both patients.
2. Explain how lifestyle and psychosocial factors contributed to disease expression.
3. Distinguish between:
o Osteoporosis vs osteoarthritis in Patient A
o Hormonal alopecia vs autoimmune alopecia in Patient A
o Normal aging vs androgen deficiency in Patient B
REMINDERS:
• This is a case-based analysis, not a textbook discussion of menopause, hypogonadism,
osteoporosis, alopecia, or sexual dysfunction.
• Do not assume or create laboratory, imaging, or diagnostic test results. Your analysis
must be based solely on the patient’s clinical presentation and underlying
pathophysiology.
• All discussion must be explicitly tied to the patients in this case. General statements
about hormones or aging must be clearly applied to the clinical scenario.
• Avoid SOAP-note, charting, or treatment-plan language. This assignment evaluates
pathophysiologic reasoning, not management decisions.
• Use primary, peer-reviewed literature (i.e., clinical guidelines, systematic reviews,
foundational studies) to support all major claims. Overreliance on secondary summaries
(i.e., StatPearls) may result in point deductions.
• Clearly distinguish:
o Hormonal deficiency vs normal aging
o Osteoporosis vs osteoarthritis
o Hormonal alopecia vs autoimmune alopecia
• Hormonal disruption (i.e., surgically induced menopause or androgen deficiency) should
be discussed as a systemic physiologic process, not limited to reproductive symptoms
alone.
• Supplements or wellness-based interventions may be discussed only as adjunctive or
supportive, not as disease-modifying or curative.
• Sex-based differences in disease expression must be addressed. Comparison between
the female and male patient is intentional and expected.
• Body of the paper must not exceed 2 pages, per rubric. Concise, synthesis-based
writing is required.
o Papers exceeding page limits due to general disease descriptions, textbook-style
writing, or unfocused background material may lose points under written
expression criteria.
• Title page and reference list do not count toward the page limit.
• Papers exceeding page limits or relying primarily on secondary sources will lose points
NURS_6501_Week 10_Case Study_Assignment_Rubric
| NURS_6501_Week 10_Case Study_Assignment_Rubric | ||
| Criteria | Ratings | Pts |
| This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomeDevelop a 1-2 page case study analysis, examining the patient signs and symptoms presented in the case study. Discuss the primary pathophysiological processes and the significance for symptom development and diagnosis. | 30 to >27.0 ptsExcellentThe response discusses the primary pathophysiological processes, and the significance for symptom development and diagnosis in detail. The pathophysiology is accurate and responses show in depth critical thinking.
27 to >24.0 ptsGoodThe response discusses the primary pathophysiological processes, significance for symptom development and the diagnosis in some detail. The pathophysiology is accurate and the responses show come critical thinking. 24 to >22.0 ptsFairThe response discusses the primary pathophysiological processes, significance for symptom development and diagnosis in a manner that is vague or inaccurate. The response is supported with explanations that are vague or based on inappropriate evidence or research. 22 to >0 ptsPoorThe response discusses the primary pathophysiological processes, the significance for symptom development and diagnosis in a manner that is vague and/or inaccurate or the description is missing. The response does not include rationales, has vague explanations or is based on inappropriate or no evidence or research. |
30 pts |
| This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomeDescribe the role genetic mutations play in the development of the disease and the risk factors that make the patient more susceptible to the disease. | 30 to >27.0 ptsExcellentThe response includes an accurate, complete, detailed and specific analysis of the genes/risk factors that are associated with the development of the disease.
27 to >24.0 ptsGoodThe response includes an accurate analysis of the genetics and risk factors that may be associated with the development of the disease. Response does not fully address all factors. 24 to >22.0 ptsFairThe response includes a vague or inaccurate analysis of the genetics/risk factors that are associated with the development of the disease. 22 to >0 ptsPoorThe response includes a vague or inaccurate analysis of the genetics/risk factors that are associated with the development of the disease and/or portions are missing. |
30 pts |
| This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomeExplain any racial/ethnic variables that may impact physiological functioning. Explain factors in the patient’s history and lifestyle that could have contributed to the development of the disease process. | 25 to >22.0 ptsExcellentThe response includes an accurate, complete, detailed and specific explanation of racial/ethnic variables that may impact physiological functioning. Explain factors in the patient’s history and lifestyle that could have contributed to the development of the disease. Content is supported by evidence and/or research, as appropriate, to support the explanation.
22 to >19.0 ptsGoodThe response includes an accurate explanation of racial/ethnic variables that may impact physiological functioning. Explains factors in the patient’s history and lifestyle that could have contributed to the development of the disease. Content is supported by evidence and/or research, as appropriate, to support the explanation. 19 to >17.0 ptsFairThe response includes a vague or inaccurate explanation of racial/ethnic variables that may impact physiological functioning. A vague or inaccurate explanation of factors in the patient’s history and lifestyle that could have contributed to the development of the disease and/or explanations based on inappropriate evidence/research. 17 to >0 ptsPoorThe response includes a vague or inaccurate explanation of racial/ethnic variables that may impact physiological functioning. A vague or inaccurate explanation of factors in the patient’s history and lifestyle that could have contributed to the development of the disease, or the explanations are based on inappropriate or no evidence/research. |
25 pts |
| This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomeWritten Expression and Formatting – Paragraph Development and Organization: Paragraphs make clear points that support well-developed ideas, flow logically, and demonstrate continuity of ideas. Sentences are carefully focused—neither long and rambling nor short and lacking substance. Content is supported by at least 3 current evidence-based sources. Body of paper is no more than 2 pages in length. | 5 to >4.0 ptsExcellentParagraphs and sentences follow writing standards for flow, continuity, and clarity. Content is supported by 3 current evidence-based sources which have been submitted with the assignment. Body of the paper is no more than 2 pages in length.
4 to >3.0 ptsGoodParagraphs and sentences follow writing standards for flow, continuity, and clarity 80% of the time. Some content is supported by 3 current evidence-based sources. Body of paper is no more than 2 pages. 3 to >2.0 ptsFairParagraphs and sentences follow writing standards for flow, continuity and clarity 60%-79% of the time. Some content is supported by at least 2 current evidence-based sources. Body of paper is longer than 2 pages. 2 to >0 ptsPoorParagraphs and sentences follow writing standards for flow, continuity, and clarity <60% of the time. No content is supported by current evidence-based sources. |
5 pts |
| This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomeWritten Expression and Formatting – English Writing Standards: Correct grammar, mechanics, and proper punctuation | 5 to >4.0 ptsExcellentUses correct grammar, spelling, and punctuation with no errors.
4 to >3.0 ptsGoodContains a few (1 or 2) grammar, spelling, and punctuation errors. 3 to >2.0 ptsFairContains several (3 or 4) grammar, spelling, and punctuation errors. 2 to >0 ptsPoorContains many (≥ 5) grammar, spelling, and punctuation errors that interfere with the reader’s understanding. |
5 pts |
| This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomeWritten Expression and Formatting – The paper follows correct APA format for title page, headings, font, spacing, margins, indentations, page numbers, running heads, parenthetical/in-text citations, and reference list. | 5 to >4.0 ptsExcellentUses correct APA format with no errors.
4 to >3.0 ptsGoodContains a few (1 or 2) APA format errors. 3 to >2.0 ptsFairContains several (3 or 4) APA format errors. 2 to >0 ptsPoorContains many (≥ 5) APA format errors. |
5 pts |
Total Points: 100