Precocious puberty

Precocious puberty
Other namesEarly puberty
SpecialtyGynecology, andrology, endocrinology
CausesIdiopathic, brain tumor

In medicine, precocious puberty is puberty occurring at an unusually early age. In most cases, the process is normal in every aspect except the unusually early age and simply represents a variation of normal development. There is early development of secondary sex characters and gametogenesis also starts earlier. Precocious puberty is of two types: true precocious puberty and pseudoprecocious puberty. In a minority of children with precocious puberty, the early development is triggered by a disease such as a tumor or injury of the brain.[1]

Even when there is no disease, unusually early puberty can have adverse effects on social behavior and psychological development (have a more mature knowledge than one's age, feel inadequate, try to attend and establish friendships with older people, depression), can reduce adult height potential, and may shift some lifelong health risks. Central precocious puberty can be treated by suppressing the pituitary hormones that induce sex steroid production. The opposite condition is delayed puberty.[2][3]

The term is used with several slightly different meanings that are usually apparent from the context. In its broadest sense, and often simplified as early puberty, "precocious puberty" sometimes refers to any physical sex hormone effect, due to any cause, occurring earlier than the usual age, especially when it is being considered as a medical problem. Stricter definitions of "precocity" may refer only to central puberty starting before a statistically specified age based on percentile in the population (e.g., 2.5 standard deviations below the population mean),[4] on expert recommendations of ages at which there is more than a negligible chance of discovering an abnormal cause, or based on opinion as to the age at which early puberty may have adverse effects. A common definition for medical purposes is onset before 8 years in girls or 9 years in boys.[5]

  1. ^ "Precocious Puberty". KidsHealth. Retrieved 2013-09-09.
  2. ^ Howard, S. R.; Dunkel, L. (2018). "The Genetic Basis of Delayed Puberty" (PDF). Neuroendocrinology. 106 (3): 283–291. doi:10.1159/000481569. PMID 28926843. S2CID 4772278.
  3. ^ Klein, D. A.; Emerick, J. E.; Sylvester, J. E.; Vogt, K. S. (November 2017). "Disorders of Puberty: An Approach to Diagnosis and Management". American Family Physician. 96 (9): 590–599. PMID 29094880.
  4. ^ precocious+puberty at the U.S. National Library of Medicine Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
  5. ^ "default - Stanford Children's Health". www.stanfordchildrens.org. Retrieved 2021-02-16.

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