Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a girl being monitored by an endocrinologist. No interventions yet, but she's had blood work and is being monitored. She was 50th percentile for height and weight from birth all the way up until 4th grade, but has dropped 10 percentiles per year every year since, falling off her growth curve.
Now as a 12 yo 7th grader she's under the 10th percentile. She wears a size 2 shoe and is 4'8" tall. She has started puberty and her bone age matches her age, so there is some concern she won't make 5' tall. Both parents are 5'8", so there's no reason to expect her to be so small. (She's of German/Irish/English heritage.)
Is there any family history of late growth spurts or delayed puberty in your family? I ask because this happened to my son- and it was eventually brushed off as a “prepubertal dip” that some kids get before the growth spurt. He was always 75% percentile but between the ages of 12-14 he grew only 2.5 inches (total- in two years) and fell very very low on the growth charts to maybe 20th percentile at the lowest point. Finally his growth picked up a bit around age 14.5. The next year he grew 4-5 inches. Same the year after that. His back was covered in stretch marks due to the quick growth. He is 6’1”.
There was definitely some history of delayed puberty and late growth in our family, however. On both sides. I know you said that she has “started puberty” but even with that- growth patterns do vary. My daughter grew 7 or 8 inches after her 12th birthday so it didn’t only apply to my son.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a girl being monitored by an endocrinologist. No interventions yet, but she's had blood work and is being monitored. She was 50th percentile for height and weight from birth all the way up until 4th grade, but has dropped 10 percentiles per year every year since, falling off her growth curve.
Now as a 12 yo 7th grader she's under the 10th percentile. She wears a size 2 shoe and is 4'8" tall. She has started puberty and her bone age matches her age, so there is some concern she won't make 5' tall. Both parents are 5'8", so there's no reason to expect her to be so small. (She's of German/Irish/English heritage.)
Is there any family history of late growth spurts or delayed puberty in your family? I ask because this happened to my son- and it was eventually brushed off as a “prepubertal dip” that some kids get before the growth spurt. He was always 75% percentile but between the ages of 12-14 he grew only 2.5 inches (total- in two years) and fell very very low on the growth charts to maybe 20th percentile at the lowest point. Finally his growth picked up a bit around age 14.5. The next year he grew 4-5 inches. Same the year after that. His back was covered in stretch marks due to the quick growth. He is 6’1”.
There was definitely some history of delayed puberty and late growth in our family, however. On both sides. I know you said that she has “started puberty” but even with that- growth patterns do vary. My daughter grew 7 or 8 inches after her 12th birthday so it didn’t only apply to my son.
So it sounds like your son was around 5’3” at 14 and I think that’s pretty much in the 20th percentile for that age. It’s good to hear that a boy can grow 10 inches after his growth spurt starts. My son is 5’ 1” at 13.5 but still has baby teeth and small feet so we’re hoping that he’s going to catch a nice long growth spurt soon!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a girl being monitored by an endocrinologist. No interventions yet, but she's had blood work and is being monitored. She was 50th percentile for height and weight from birth all the way up until 4th grade, but has dropped 10 percentiles per year every year since, falling off her growth curve.
Now as a 12 yo 7th grader she's under the 10th percentile. She wears a size 2 shoe and is 4'8" tall. She has started puberty and her bone age matches her age, so there is some concern she won't make 5' tall. Both parents are 5'8", so there's no reason to expect her to be so small. (She's of German/Irish/English heritage.)
Has she been screened for genetic disorders or any other syndromes? Anything else seem off about her other than the growth? This seems highly unusual
If you were a doctor you wouldn’t find this unusual. My oldest daughter is the only short one. I know at 12 she was 4”10 because she played Clara in the Nutcracker and was in another child role in the professional ballet company. They were strict about height and they measured the girls before auditioning. There were plenty of 12 year olds under 5’ tall.
My daughter didnt Get her period for two more years. She never had a growth spurt she just slowly grew to 5’2”. Perfectly normal.
The PP’s daughter is 4’8” at 12 and basically stopped growing at 10- and has tall parents. That isn’t normal
Tall parents isn’t relevant. Her growth stopping at ten years old is relevant.
She is still growing, just slowly. She's been gaining about an inch per year, while most kids are growing 2-4" per year at least at these ages. Growing only one inch in a year isn't even unusual, it's that she hasn't grown more in other years so the cumulative effect.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a girl being monitored by an endocrinologist. No interventions yet, but she's had blood work and is being monitored. She was 50th percentile for height and weight from birth all the way up until 4th grade, but has dropped 10 percentiles per year every year since, falling off her growth curve.
Now as a 12 yo 7th grader she's under the 10th percentile. She wears a size 2 shoe and is 4'8" tall. She has started puberty and her bone age matches her age, so there is some concern she won't make 5' tall. Both parents are 5'8", so there's no reason to expect her to be so small. (She's of German/Irish/English heritage.)
Is there any family history of late growth spurts or delayed puberty in your family? I ask because this happened to my son- and it was eventually brushed off as a “prepubertal dip” that some kids get before the growth spurt. He was always 75% percentile but between the ages of 12-14 he grew only 2.5 inches (total- in two years) and fell very very low on the growth charts to maybe 20th percentile at the lowest point. Finally his growth picked up a bit around age 14.5. The next year he grew 4-5 inches. Same the year after that. His back was covered in stretch marks due to the quick growth. He is 6’1”.
There was definitely some history of delayed puberty and late growth in our family, however. On both sides. I know you said that she has “started puberty” but even with that- growth patterns do vary. My daughter grew 7 or 8 inches after her 12th birthday so it didn’t only apply to my son.
Anonymous wrote:I have a girl being monitored by an endocrinologist. No interventions yet, but she's had blood work and is being monitored. She was 50th percentile for height and weight from birth all the way up until 4th grade, but has dropped 10 percentiles per year every year since, falling off her growth curve.
Now as a 12 yo 7th grader she's under the 10th percentile. She wears a size 2 shoe and is 4'8" tall. She has started puberty and her bone age matches her age, so there is some concern she won't make 5' tall. Both parents are 5'8", so there's no reason to expect her to be so small. (She's of German/Irish/English heritage.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a girl being monitored by an endocrinologist. No interventions yet, but she's had blood work and is being monitored. She was 50th percentile for height and weight from birth all the way up until 4th grade, but has dropped 10 percentiles per year every year since, falling off her growth curve.
Now as a 12 yo 7th grader she's under the 10th percentile. She wears a size 2 shoe and is 4'8" tall. She has started puberty and her bone age matches her age, so there is some concern she won't make 5' tall. Both parents are 5'8", so there's no reason to expect her to be so small. (She's of German/Irish/English heritage.)
Has she been screened for genetic disorders or any other syndromes? Anything else seem off about her other than the growth? This seems highly unusual
If you were a doctor you wouldn’t find this unusual. My oldest daughter is the only short one. I know at 12 she was 4”10 because she played Clara in the Nutcracker and was in another child role in the professional ballet company. They were strict about height and they measured the girls before auditioning. There were plenty of 12 year olds under 5’ tall.
My daughter didnt Get her period for two more years. She never had a growth spurt she just slowly grew to 5’2”. Perfectly normal.
The PP’s daughter is 4’8” at 12 and basically stopped growing at 10- and has tall parents. That isn’t normal
Tall parents isn’t relevant. Her growth stopping at ten years old is relevant.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a girl being monitored by an endocrinologist. No interventions yet, but she's had blood work and is being monitored. She was 50th percentile for height and weight from birth all the way up until 4th grade, but has dropped 10 percentiles per year every year since, falling off her growth curve.
Now as a 12 yo 7th grader she's under the 10th percentile. She wears a size 2 shoe and is 4'8" tall. She has started puberty and her bone age matches her age, so there is some concern she won't make 5' tall. Both parents are 5'8", so there's no reason to expect her to be so small. (She's of German/Irish/English heritage.)
Has she been screened for genetic disorders or any other syndromes? Anything else seem off about her other than the growth? This seems highly unusual
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a girl being monitored by an endocrinologist. No interventions yet, but she's had blood work and is being monitored. She was 50th percentile for height and weight from birth all the way up until 4th grade, but has dropped 10 percentiles per year every year since, falling off her growth curve.
Now as a 12 yo 7th grader she's under the 10th percentile. She wears a size 2 shoe and is 4'8" tall. She has started puberty and her bone age matches her age, so there is some concern she won't make 5' tall. Both parents are 5'8", so there's no reason to expect her to be so small. (She's of German/Irish/English heritage.)
Has she been screened for genetic disorders or any other syndromes? Anything else seem off about her other than the growth? This seems highly unusual
If you were a doctor you wouldn’t find this unusual. My oldest daughter is the only short one. I know at 12 she was 4”10 because she played Clara in the Nutcracker and was in another child role in the professional ballet company. They were strict about height and they measured the girls before auditioning. There were plenty of 12 year olds under 5’ tall.
My daughter didnt Get her period for two more years. She never had a growth spurt she just slowly grew to 5’2”. Perfectly normal.
The PP’s daughter is 4’8” at 12 and basically stopped growing at 10- and has tall parents. That isn’t normal
Anonymous wrote:My daughter was 4’8.5” at 12 and then grew 5 inches within the next year. She’s now fully grown at 5’5”. Sometimes it just takes them awhile to catch up!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a girl being monitored by an endocrinologist. No interventions yet, but she's had blood work and is being monitored. She was 50th percentile for height and weight from birth all the way up until 4th grade, but has dropped 10 percentiles per year every year since, falling off her growth curve.
Now as a 12 yo 7th grader she's under the 10th percentile. She wears a size 2 shoe and is 4'8" tall. She has started puberty and her bone age matches her age, so there is some concern she won't make 5' tall. Both parents are 5'8", so there's no reason to expect her to be so small. (She's of German/Irish/English heritage.)
Has she been screened for genetic disorders or any other syndromes? Anything else seem off about her other than the growth? This seems highly unusual
If you were a doctor you wouldn’t find this unusual. My oldest daughter is the only short one. I know at 12 she was 4”10 because she played Clara in the Nutcracker and was in another child role in the professional ballet company. They were strict about height and they measured the girls before auditioning. There were plenty of 12 year olds under 5’ tall.
My daughter didnt Get her period for two more years. She never had a growth spurt she just slowly grew to 5’2”. Perfectly normal.
Anonymous wrote:My daughter was 4’8.5” at 12 and then grew 5 inches within the next year. She’s now fully grown at 5’5”. Sometimes it just takes them awhile to catch up!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a girl being monitored by an endocrinologist. No interventions yet, but she's had blood work and is being monitored. She was 50th percentile for height and weight from birth all the way up until 4th grade, but has dropped 10 percentiles per year every year since, falling off her growth curve.
Now as a 12 yo 7th grader she's under the 10th percentile. She wears a size 2 shoe and is 4'8" tall. She has started puberty and her bone age matches her age, so there is some concern she won't make 5' tall. Both parents are 5'8", so there's no reason to expect her to be so small. (She's of German/Irish/English heritage.)
Has she been screened for genetic disorders or any other syndromes? Anything else seem off about her other than the growth? This seems highly unusual
If you were a doctor you wouldn’t find this unusual. My oldest daughter is the only short one. I know at 12 she was 4”10 because she played Clara in the Nutcracker and was in another child role in the professional ballet company. They were strict about height and they measured the girls before auditioning. There were plenty of 12 year olds under 5’ tall.
My daughter didnt Get her period for two more years. She never had a growth spurt she just slowly grew to 5’2”. Perfectly normal.
But was her growth consistent? DP but my daughter had a similar drop off the growth curve and it took two years for doctors to test and diagnose a genetic disorder.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a girl being monitored by an endocrinologist. No interventions yet, but she's had blood work and is being monitored. She was 50th percentile for height and weight from birth all the way up until 4th grade, but has dropped 10 percentiles per year every year since, falling off her growth curve.
Now as a 12 yo 7th grader she's under the 10th percentile. She wears a size 2 shoe and is 4'8" tall. She has started puberty and her bone age matches her age, so there is some concern she won't make 5' tall. Both parents are 5'8", so there's no reason to expect her to be so small. (She's of German/Irish/English heritage.)
Has she been screened for genetic disorders or any other syndromes? Anything else seem off about her other than the growth? This seems highly unusual
If you were a doctor you wouldn’t find this unusual. My oldest daughter is the only short one. I know at 12 she was 4”10 because she played Clara in the Nutcracker and was in another child role in the professional ballet company. They were strict about height and they measured the girls before auditioning. There were plenty of 12 year olds under 5’ tall.
My daughter didnt Get her period for two more years. She never had a growth spurt she just slowly grew to 5’2”. Perfectly normal.
Anonymous wrote:Growth hormone injections are not only for height, but also for brain and muscle development.