Publication | Open Access
Precocious puberty in girls: early diagnosis of a slowly progressing variant.
121
Citations
23
References
1989
Year
FertilityProgressing VariantReproductive HealthGynecologyEducationMenstrual CyclePrecocious PubertyOsteoporosisAdolescenceEarly DiagnosisAdolescent MedicineCentral Precocious PubertyAbnormal DevelopmentDisorders Of Sex DevelopmentSexual And Reproductive HealthAdolescent BiologyInfertilityAndrologyPediatric EndocrinologyAdolescent DevelopmentEndocrinologyOvarian HormoneChild DevelopmentPubertyPediatricsSevere Precocious PubertyMenopauseMedicine
An attempt was made to identify the less severe cases of precocious puberty and to describe their natural course. A group of 17 girls with precocious puberty and a bone age advance over chronological age of less than two years (group 1) was compared with a group of 19 patients with severe precocious puberty and bone age advance of two years or more (group 2). Mean (SEM) plasma oestradiol concentrations were 82 (30) pmol/l and 164 (21) pmol/l (p less than 0.05), vaginal maturation indexes were 16 (5) and 41 (4), and plasma somatomedin C concentrations were 1.0 (0.2) U/ml (n = 8) and 2.1 (0.3) U/ml (n = 16) in groups 1 and 2, respectively. The time between onset and diagnosis of secondary sexual characteristics was about one year in both groups. After two years' follow up the untreated patients in group 1 had maintained their predicted final height. These changes were in contrast to those observed at first examination in patients in group 2 who had a mean (SD) predicted final height of -1.3 (0.2) and a mean bone age advance of 3.0 (0.2) years. These data show that bone age advance to chronological age, and plasma somatomedin C concentrations measured at initial evaluation are helpful in identifying less severe and potentially slow progressing forms of central precocious puberty.
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