When it comes to the birds and the bees, some parents may want to have
that talk with their boys a little sooner than they expected.
Researchers have found signs of puberty in American boys up to two
years earlier than previously reported — age 9 on average for blacks, 10
for whites and Hispanics. Other studies have suggested that girls, too,
are entering puberty younger, reports The Associated Press.
Why is this happening? Theories range from higher levels of obesity and
inactivity to chemicals in food and water, all of which might interfere
with normal hormone production. But those are just theories, and they
remain unproven.
Doctors say earlier puberty is not necessarily cause for concern. And some experts question whether the trend is even real.
Dr. William Adelman, an adolescent medicine specialist in the Baltimore
area, says the new research is the first to find early, strong physical
evidence that boys are maturing earlier. But he added that the study
still isn't proof and said it raises a lot of questions.
Earlier research based on 20-year-old national data also suggested a
trend toward early puberty in boys, but it was based on less rigorous
information. The new study involved testes measurements in more than
4,000 boys. Enlargement of testes is generally the earliest sign of
puberty in boys.
The study was published online Saturday in Pediatrics to coincide with
the American Academy of Pediatrics' national conference in New Orleans.
Dr. Neerav Desai, an adolescent medicine specialist at Vanderbilt
University in Nashville, said he's seen a subtle trend toward slightly
earlier puberty in boys. He said it's important for parents and doctors
to be aware so they can help children emotionally prepare for the
changes that come with puberty.
Doctors generally consider puberty early if it begins before age 8 in girls and before age 9 in boys.
Boys are more likely than girls to have an underlying physical cause
for early puberty. But it's likely that most, if not all, of the boys in
the study were free of any conditions that might explain the results,
said lead author Marcia Herman-Giddens, a researcher at the University
of North Carolina in Chapel Hill.
Problems such as thyroid abnormalities and brain tumours have been
linked to early puberty. But boys with chronic medical conditions or who
were using medicines that could affect puberty were excluded from the
research.
In girls, early puberty has been linked with increased chances for
developing breast cancer, but whether it poses health risks for boys is
uncertain. Some scientists think early testes development may increase
the risk for testicular cancer, but a recent research analysis found no
such link.
"If it's true that boys are starting puberty younger, it's not clear
that means anything negative or has any implications for long-term,"
said Adelman, a member of the American Academy of Paediatrics’'
committee on adolescence.
For the new study, researchers recruited paediatricians in 41 states
who participate in the academy's office-based research network. Doctors
asked parents and boys aged 6 to 16 to take part during regular
checkups. The visits took place between 2005 and 2010.
Half of the boys were white. The rest were almost evenly divided among blacks and Hispanics.
On average, white boys started puberty at age 10, a year and a half
earlier than what has long been considered the normal average. For black
boys, the average age of 9 was about two years earlier than in previous
research. Among Hispanics, age 10 was similar to previous research that
only involved Mexican-American boys. The new study included boys from
other Hispanic backgrounds.
Testes enlargement was seen at age 6 in 9 percent of white boys, almost 20 percent of blacks and 7 percent of Hispanics.
Pubic hair growth, another early sign of puberty, started about a year
after testes enlargement in all groups but still earlier than previously
thought.
In girls, breast development is the first sign, and recent research
suggested that it starts at age 7 in about 10 percent of white girls, 23
percent of blacks and 15 percent of Hispanics. That's substantially
higher than rates reported more than a decade ago.
But some experts have questioned methods used in studies in girls,
noting that the age when girls start menstruating has not changed much
and remains around age 12 on average.
Dr. Dianne Deplewski, a paediatric endocrinologist at the University of
Chicago, has not seen any increase in boys referred to her for signs of
early puberty. She said it's possible that the new study results were
skewed by families who brought their boys to the doctor because they
already had concerns about their health.
The study had other limitations. Testes were measured just once, and
doctors weren't randomly recruited but volunteered to participate. That
means it's possible that those with early maturing patients were overly
represented, but Herman-Giddens said it's unlikely boys in the study
were different from those in the general U.S. population.
She said the research methods weren't perfect but that they're the best
to date. She also stressed that the results shouldn't be used to
establish a "new normal" for the start of puberty in boys.
"Just because this is happening doesn't mean this is normal or healthy," the researcher said.
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