Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son is 16 and almost all his friends are under 5'10." I'm so curious if they'll stay these heights or keep growing. They seem unusually short---I'm thinking of at least a dozen boys.
It does seem unusual they would ALL be under 5'10". It seems there is such a wide range of height at that age. For example, DS' friends' height in his friend group probably range from 5'3" to about 6'3". They are all 14 or 15.
NP here. I thought 5’10” was around average height…is it really considered short now?
5'9" is average height for men in the U.S.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son is 16 and almost all his friends are under 5'10." I'm so curious if they'll stay these heights or keep growing. They seem unusually short---I'm thinking of at least a dozen boys.
It does seem unusual they would ALL be under 5'10". It seems there is such a wide range of height at that age. For example, DS' friends' height in his friend group probably range from 5'3" to about 6'3". They are all 14 or 15.
NP here. I thought 5’10” was around average height…is it really considered short now?
Anonymous wrote:My kid had an X-ray this week for an injury and the doctor happened to say his growth plates are beginning to close. DS is 5'9'' with a 5'7'' mom (taller side for women) and 5'8'' dad (shorter side for men). I was like, so is he done? Dr. said close but will probably grow a few more inches. DS immediately asked to go to the store for protein powder (it was a joke). He's almost 14.5
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no way anyone can know that, least of all your Doctor.
Unless they looked at his growth plates.
Yes, it's based on Tanner stage. Usually at the check up for adolescents the doctor notes the Tanner stage.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Growth plates close at bone age 16. But some kids hit bone age 16 at 14 or 15 years old and some don't hit it until 18 or 19.
It's closely tied to puberty. Testosterone converted into estrogen is what makes bone age advance and growth plates close.
Kids with big constitutional delay aren't having their growth plates/bones closing at 16. All the males in my family had significant growth past the age of 16. And they all gained an additional inch or two in college.
Sorry; I guess I wasn't clear.
Growth plates close at BONE AGE 16. Only an x-ray read by a radiologist and/or endocrinologist can tell you what BONE AGE your child is.
Some kids hit BONE AGE 16 at chronological age 14 or 15 years old. Others do not hit BONE AGE 16 until they are much older.
So some kids will be done growing at 14 or 15, if puberty is far along enough that they have reached BONE AGE 16. But others will grow until 18 or 19, because puberty was later, and they hit BONE AGE 16 at chronological age 18 or 19 or even 20.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no way anyone can know that, least of all your Doctor.
Unless they looked at his growth plates.
Anonymous wrote:This is an interesting thread. Is there correlation between baby teeth and late puberty?
My 15.5 ds is still gradually losing a few more baby teeth. Dentist says he won’t get into braces until he’s 16.
My ds does show other signs of puberty - voice changing, hair etc- but wondering if he may have a growth spurt to come.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Growth plates close at bone age 16. But some kids hit bone age 16 at 14 or 15 years old and some don't hit it until 18 or 19.
It's closely tied to puberty. Testosterone converted into estrogen is what makes bone age advance and growth plates close.
Kids with big constitutional delay aren't having their growth plates/bones closing at 16. All the males in my family had significant growth past the age of 16. And they all gained an additional inch or two in college.
Anonymous wrote:One way you can tell if his major growth has stopped is whether he is bulking up considerably in terms of muscle. My 14 year old is 5'5", and my husband is only 5'7" (we are Asian). However, he is still a skinny string bean compared to his other friends (same race as us). His doctor said in light of that, we can definitely expect at least a bit more growth.
Anonymous wrote:My boys stopped early. My older son had very delayed puberty (14.5) and was always a very short kid (5-10%) so I thought he’d grow until 18. Instead he had a wild growth spurt over a single year and then stopped entirely. Fortunately, he went from very short to above average. His younger brother who was on the tall side (75%) hit puberty around 13. At 15 he appears to be done and it looks like he will be an inch shorter than his brother which nobody expected. It makes me think it’s all about genetics but I do wonder why both stopped growing years earlier than most.
Anonymous wrote:Growth plates close at bone age 16. But some kids hit bone age 16 at 14 or 15 years old and some don't hit it until 18 or 19.
It's closely tied to puberty. Testosterone converted into estrogen is what makes bone age advance and growth plates close.