Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Doctors can tell by physical exam what stage of development teens are in and can therefore estimate when they will stop growing. If you are 14 and tanner 2 you probably have a few years of growth. if you are tanner 5 that signals the end of growth.
How long does each stage tend to last? The doctor said my son was early stage 2 at his 13 year checkup.
Anonymous wrote:Our Dr. said he thinks my son is done growing at 15 - he's 5'6". I thought boys grew until 19 or 20? This is just based on an annual exam, no x-rays fyi.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Doctors can tell by physical exam what stage of development teens are in and can therefore estimate when they will stop growing. If you are 14 and tanner 2 you probably have a few years of growth. if you are tanner 5 that signals the end of growth.
How long does each stage tend to last? The doctor said my son was early stage 2 at his 13 year checkup.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Doctors can tell by physical exam what stage of development teens are in and can therefore estimate when they will stop growing. If you are 14 and tanner 2 you probably have a few years of growth. if you are tanner 5 that signals the end of growth.
How long does each stage tend to last? The doctor said my son was early stage 2 at his 13 year checkup.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can anyone explain what an X-ray shows to predict growth? Somehow 4 kids but we never learned or experienced this.
No one gets the X Ray unless they see an Endo or break a bone. More for late bloomers
not necessarily true.
My son had foot issues all throughout 5th grade. He said every time he ran, his heel hurt. I thought he just needed to rest his foot. But I finally took him to an orthopedist several months later. Older dr, and he immediately had a suspicion as to what the issue was, but he took an xray of his foot, and that confirmed his suspicion.
It was growing pains, basically. I think someone on this forum mentioned what the actual medical terminology is, but I can't recall the term. The dr said he had four kids go through the exact same thing.
Dr said DS bone age was about 18months behind chronological age. He hit puberty late (15, from a family of late bloomers). He's 18 now, and grew 2" in the past 7 months. Always the shortest until 17 when he started to grow past his friends who had all stopped growing at 16.
IMO, it's largely genetics - when you start puberty (late bloomer), and if the dad (usually) grew past 16. For us, both are true.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can anyone explain what an X-ray shows to predict growth? Somehow 4 kids but we never learned or experienced this.
No one gets the X Ray unless they see an Endo or break a bone. More for late bloomers
not necessarily true.
My son had foot issues all throughout 5th grade. He said every time he ran, his heel hurt. I thought he just needed to rest his foot. But I finally took him to an orthopedist several months later. Older dr, and he immediately had a suspicion as to what the issue was, but he took an xray of his foot, and that confirmed his suspicion.
It was growing pains, basically. I think someone on this forum mentioned what the actual medical terminology is, but I can't recall the term. The dr said he had four kids go through the exact same thing.
Dr said DS bone age was about 18months behind chronological age. He hit puberty late (15, from a family of late bloomers). He's 18 now, and grew 2" in the past 7 months. Always the shortest until 17 when he started to grow past his friends who had all stopped growing at 16.
IMO, it's largely genetics - when you start puberty (late bloomer), and if the dad (usually) grew past 16. For us, both are true.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can anyone explain what an X-ray shows to predict growth? Somehow 4 kids but we never learned or experienced this.
No one gets the X Ray unless they see an Endo or break a bone. More for late bloomers
Anonymous wrote:Most (not all) boys stop growing by end of 15th year.
I think you hear about the late growers a lot because they’re talked about a lot because people are worried about them being short and entering puberty late.