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Earlier Onset of Puberty in Girls: Relation to Increased Body Mass Index and Race

A recent study conducted by the Pediatric Research in Office Settings network provided evidence that girls in the United States, especially black girls, are starting puberty at a younger age than earlier studies had found, but the reasons for this are not known. Because nutritional status is known t...

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Published in:Pediatrics (Evanston) 2001-08, Vol.108 (2), p.347-353
Main Authors: Kaplowitz, Paul B, Slora, Eric J, Wasserman, Richard C, Pedlow, Steven E, Herman-Giddens, Marcia E
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creator Kaplowitz, Paul B
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description A recent study conducted by the Pediatric Research in Office Settings network provided evidence that girls in the United States, especially black girls, are starting puberty at a younger age than earlier studies had found, but the reasons for this are not known. Because nutritional status is known to affect timing of puberty and there is a clear trend for increasing obesity in US children during the past 25 years, it was hypothesized that the earlier onset of puberty could be attributable to the increasing prevalence of obesity in young girls. Therefore, the objective of this study was to reexamine the Pediatric Research in Office Settings puberty data by comparing the age-normalized body mass index (BMI-ZS; a crude estimate of fatness) of girls who had breast or pubic hair development versus those who were still prepubertal, looking at the effects of age and race. For white girls, the BMI-ZS were markedly higher in pubertal versus prepubertal 6- to 9-year-olds; for black girls, a smaller difference was seen, which was significant only for 9-year-olds. Higher BMI-ZS also were found in girls who had pubic hair but no breast development versus girls who had neither pubic hair nor breast development. A multivariate analysis confirms that obesity (as measured by BMI) is significantly associated with early puberty in white girls and is associated with early puberty in black girls as well, but to a lesser extent. The results are consistent with obesity's being an important contributing factor to the earlier onset of puberty in girls. Factors other than obesity, however, perhaps genetic and/or environmental ones, are needed to explain the higher prevalence of early puberty in black versus white girls.
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Because nutritional status is known to affect timing of puberty and there is a clear trend for increasing obesity in US children during the past 25 years, it was hypothesized that the earlier onset of puberty could be attributable to the increasing prevalence of obesity in young girls. Therefore, the objective of this study was to reexamine the Pediatric Research in Office Settings puberty data by comparing the age-normalized body mass index (BMI-ZS; a crude estimate of fatness) of girls who had breast or pubic hair development versus those who were still prepubertal, looking at the effects of age and race. For white girls, the BMI-ZS were markedly higher in pubertal versus prepubertal 6- to 9-year-olds; for black girls, a smaller difference was seen, which was significant only for 9-year-olds. Higher BMI-ZS also were found in girls who had pubic hair but no breast development versus girls who had neither pubic hair nor breast development. 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subjects Adolescent
African Continental Ancestry Group - genetics
Biological and medical sciences
Body Mass Index
Breast - growth & development
Child
Childhood obesity
Comoros
Continental Population Groups - genetics
Demographic aspects
Ethnic groups
European Continental Ancestry Group - genetics
Female
Girls
Gynecology. Andrology. Obstetrics
Hair - growth & development
Health
Health and race
Health aspects
Humans
Logistic Models
Medical sciences
Menstrual Cycle - physiology
Obesity - epidemiology
Obesity in children
Pediatrics
Puberal and climacteric disorders (male and female)
Puberty
Puberty - physiology
Puberty, Precocious - epidemiology
Race
Sex Factors
Sexual Maturation - physiology
title Earlier Onset of Puberty in Girls: Relation to Increased Body Mass Index and Race
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