Anonymous wrote:My dd saw an endocrinologist for short stature at age 3 and again at 9. Her bone age is a bit delayed and we have a family history of late puberty/constitutional growth delay so we are hoping that means she has more years of growth ahead of her. They did not even check for growth hormone deficiency because she has none of the other symptoms according to the dr.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son was so small he fell off the graph. We had him evaluated at Children's. Between the bone -age x ray and the genetic trending the doctor concluded he was right on target for our family... in the expected range considering height of parents and grandparents. Thus, we were advised to not intervene with medications.
Please consult a Pediatric Endocrinologist who deals with growth issues all day long. Yes, your ped can order the test, but if you need advice see an expert who focuses on this as their life's work.
What percentage was your son in?
Not the PP, but my kid fell off their chart from 25% to below 4%. Each kid is different. Schedule the appt because it is a loooong wait to be seen.
Anonymous wrote:My son was so small he fell off the graph. We had him evaluated at Children's. Between the bone -age x ray and the genetic trending the doctor concluded he was right on target for our family... in the expected range considering height of parents and grandparents. Thus, we were advised to not intervene with medications.
Please consult a Pediatric Endocrinologist who deals with growth issues all day long. Yes, your ped can order the test, but if you need advice see an expert who focuses on this as their life's work.
What percentage was your son in?