Early Puberty In Girls Due to Being Overweight As A Toddler
Featured ArticleMain Category: Pediatrics / Children's Health
Also Included In: Obesity / Weight Loss / Fitness; Women's Health / Gynecology
Article Date: 05 Mar 2007 - 4:00 PDT
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US scientists have shown that being overweight as a toddler increases the chance that a girl will reach puberty early.
The study from the University of Michigan's Mott Children's Hospital is published in the journal Pediatrics.
Dr Joyce Lee, the lead author, and colleagues used the data on 354 girls from age 3 who were enrolled in the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) Study of Early Child Care and Youth Development (SECCYD).
SECCYD is a national programme run by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) where qualified researchers are permitted access to datasets if they fulfill the NICHD criteria.
The SECCYD data set offered the researchers the opportunity to look at longitudinal data on the girls at age 3 and 4.5, and then at school grades 1, 4, 5 and 6.
They looked at height and weight at each measurement stage, and from grades 4 to 6 they also looked at pubertal stage measurements (these were based on physical examination reports and reports completed by the girls' mothers). They also took into account other factors such as race, the mother's education and the mother's age when she started menstruating.
The girls' pubertal stage was assessed according to stage of breast development and start of the menstrual cycle.
Breast development was measured using Tanner Stages, a way of assessing physical development in children. For girls' breasts Tanner Stage 1 is prepubertal and has no glandular tissue and Stage 2 is where the breast buds are forming. There are five Tanner stages altogether, with fully formed adult breasts at Stage 5.
Dr Lee and her team used statistical logistic regression to predict early versus late puberty from Body Mass Index (BMI) which combines weight and height.
Of the 354 girls, 168 of them (48 per cent) were classed as being "in puberty" by the age of 9, with 6.5 per cent having started their menstrual cycle by age 11.
The results showed that an earlier onset of puberty was positively and consistently linked to rate of change of BMI between age 3 and grade 1, an earlier age of the mother's own start of menstruation, and being non-white.
The researchers said that before this study, all we knew was that higher BMI was linked to earlier onset of puberty but not which caused the other. Now this study shows it is highly likely that high BMI causes early puberty.
Other studies have shown that children are more obese than they were 30 years ago, and also that puberty in girls starts earlier than 30 years ago. Dr Lee and colleagues said their study offers strong evidence that being overweight in pre-puberty is what causes the early onset of puberty in girls.
Early onset of puberty in girls is a serious health issue because it is linked to increased mental problems, early abuse of alcohol, early sexual encounters and teenage pregnancy. It is also linked to increased obesity as a grown up and reproductive cancers, said the researchers.
"Weight Status in Young Girls and the Onset of Puberty."
Joyce M. Lee, Danielle Appugliese, Niko Kaciroti, Robert F. Corwyn, Robert H. Bradley, and Julie C. Lumeng
Pediatrics Vol. 119 No. 3 March 2007, pp. E624-E630
doi:10.1542/peds.2006-2188
Click here for Abstract.
Click here for the US NICHD Study of Early Child Care and Youth Development (SECCYD).
Written by: Catharine Paddock
Writer: Medical News Today
Copyright: Medical News Today
Not to be reproduced without permission of Medical News Today
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Visitor Opinions In Chronological Order (3)
What A Joke!
posted by maridy on 5 Mar 2007 at 5:36 amThis is rubbish! My daughter was never overweight in fact she in was was underweight and under doctors care, she has never been even close and very small for her age, she started puberty very early. I myself was overweight as a toddler and started very late so I personally don't take this article very serious at all, everyone is very different, I don't believe for a second that puberty is based on weight as a toddler, genetics is probably more accurate! LOL!
Overweight Toddlers? Try Growth Hormones!
posted by BrianK on 5 Mar 2007 at 8:30 amA toddler being overweight has very little to do with the early onset of puberty. Children, both girls and boys, are blossoming earlier, growing taller (and wider) and all medical science can do is point a finger at an overweight toddler?
Growth hormones are in our food supply. They quickly get an animal to market at a lower overall cost for the farmer or rancher. If you eat the meat, you also ingest growth hormones.
The medical community needs to look at that fact that the food supply, regulated by the FDA, is the root cause of many of our health issues today... Oh, wait, they're in on it!
Buy organic foods!
It Is Complete Rubbish
posted by Joyce on 6 Mar 2007 at 5:50 amI was underweight as a child, and went through puberty very early, with my period starting at age 9. I am 51 now and still have it. I would say it is genetic except I have 4 sisters and none of them started that early. It could not have been hormones added into the food chain either.
It seems that these days anyone can "do research" and publish anything whether it has any merit or not
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