Diagnostic for the disease usually takes place in late adolescence or early adulthood. Delayed adolescence is traditionally characterized as the absence of virilization and testicular enlargement and coincide with the absence of or low sperm count by 14 years of age in males and as essential amenorrhea and the absence of breast development by 13 years of age in females. Any indications of eunuchoidal properties alongside either anosmia or hyposmia can confirm Kallmann syndrome. Nonetheless, the event of extreme genital inconsistencies, for example, hypospadias, likely suggest the apparent existence of a human chorionic gonadotropin deficiency. Additionally, restorative conditions such as unilateral renal aplasia may be present, as well as neurological