Anonymous wrote:I am 5'7" and my husband is 5'8". Based on our height, my son should be 5'10". Please know that I do not need my son to be 5'10". I don't know if people understand but this is mentally hard on him however dumb and immature that sounds. People asking him why he is so small, saying he doesn't eat, making fun of him...all of that adds up So...am I doing this because I need to have a tall son...no, not at all. I am telling him it doesn't matter and all the positive stuff but I cannot control what he hears from family, friends, bullies, etc. People do not stop to think what other people feel when they say stuff...and I'm sure I'm guilty of it too with things I have not gone through.
Anonymous wrote:Isn’t 15.5 a little too late to start growth hormone?
Anonymous wrote:My son passed the Growth hormone test. His bone age is behind his age. His doctor had put him on the medication to slow things down. He is now off that medication.
We have met regularly with his endocrinologist and the endocrinologist's recommendation is for him to try the growth hormones.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, a 15.5 year old boy at 5'3" is going to be in the 10%-25% percentile range, which is within normal range. Are those numbers accurate?
Not the OP, but....
Growth hormone disorder means your child isn't producing enough growth hormone. It doesn't mean they have to be in the third percentile of height. My son has it and until age 12 or so, was 80th-90th percentile in height. Then suddenly stopped growing. He did a stim test, and yes indeed, he doesn't make enough growth hormone. If untreated, he would have ended up around 5'5 or 5'6 probably -- which is where plenty of non-GHD people end up and that's normal, but he "should" end up closer to 6 feet tall given his mid-parental height and where he was on the curve his entire life.
Giving him the growth hormone he lacked is not just to grow the extra inches, but it is important for other facets of health as well, including heart health.
Most kids with growth hormone disorder are extremely short, but not all. Just because OP's kid is 10th-25th percentile does not mean he doesn't have it. I assume he's done the stim test and been officially diagnosed with it. That's really the only way to tell.
Anonymous wrote:OP, a 15.5 year old boy at 5'3" is going to be in the 10%-25% percentile range, which is within normal range. Are those numbers accurate?