The bone study is not an exact science. Anything within a year give or take is normal. |
Well that and he clearly didn’t have other signs of advanced puberty which is what prompted the visit to an endocrinologist. |
Good point. And arguably, one can do even less about their height than their weight. |
It’s taboo to judge people about their weight? It should be. It’s not. Also have any of you ever walked up to a tall person and gawked at them and asked how tall they are? If you have, sit down. You’re a hypocrite. |
| Just go get a second opinion. Asking for medical advice on this forum is unwise. |
Please shut up |
People are absolutely judged for their weight. It’s just taboo to say it aloud. While people may say jokes about height, no one is being judged by it. People cant control their height, we all know that. |
My younger son lost teeth late into elementary school/middle school. He turns 17 in 1 month and some of his second molars (not the wisdom teeth- the second molars that usually come in between 12-14). He just had to have an impacted one surgically removed--no space in jaw. When he had a foot xray for sports injury at 15 his growth plates were wide open. He just started to grow at 16. He has a lot of growing left to do. Older brother grew late (but not as late as younger one). We saw older brother tall--until 5th grade--then by 8th was on the shorter side. He was 5'4" Freshmen year and graduated 5'11" and now over 6 feet as a freshman in college. The younger one was 5'3" freshmen year HS and a junior and now about 5'8"-5'9"- but not shaving, baby face--just really starting to grow --and 17 in a month. |
| ^ meant all adult molars haven't even come in yet |
A different study- this graph shows three cohorts of boys and girls - early, mid, and late onset growth spurt. The late onset growth spurt group achieves greatest total height, followed by mid and then early onset. This is why the “late bloomer” concept exists. Notably, this does not mean that shorter stature kids will surpass their peers. These curves were controlled for pre-pubertal height. So if you take 3 kids who had the same pre-pubertal height, the one who experiences their growth spurt later will likely be taller by adulthood. https://www.frontiersin.org/files/Articles/882840/fendo-13-882840-HTML-r1/image_m/fendo-13-882840-g002.jpg |
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hang him by his ankles
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This really isn’t shut up worthy. The point is don’t comment or bully others based on people’s appearance. If everyone followed this advice across the board we’d all be better off and these repeated threads about make height would not exist. Short males are just one group that get looks and comments. Don’t comment on people’s weight, height, or looks. If you want to say something because you just can’t stand not to, say you look great today and leave it at that. |
What do you mean “arguably”? One is entirely out of your control, one is very much within your control. |
| If they aren’t shaving does that indicate still a good bit left in puberty? My son’s voice is changing but still no need to shave and has a baby face. |
Nobody’s listening to you on your soapbox |