Why puberty now begins at seven
By Michelle Roberts
BBC News health reporter

Whether it is sprouting hair, budding breasts or a breaking voice, the
signs that herald puberty can be distressing and difficult to cope with.

In the western world there is much evidence children are reaching
puberty at younger and younger ages - some girls at the age of seven.

The reasons for this trend are unknown - and some dispute it is
occuring at all.

But several theories have been suggested.

And Swedish scientists at the Karolinska Institute aim to find out by
tackling the puzzle from different angles.

Precocious puberty

It is accepted that the normal age for a girl to begin to develop the
first signs of puberty is 10 and above. Boys develop slightly later,
generally at eleven-and-a-half.

However, the age appears to have been decreasing in developed countries.

In 1990, the first signs of puberty were around the age of eight for
girls - the whole process taking two years to complete.

Now, according to researchers, some enter puberty as young as seven.

Boys, too, say some experts, are entering puberty at an earlier stage,
albeit still slightly later than girls.

But it is unclear whether this is a simply a shift of the norm, or if
more children are experiencing a phenomenon called precocious puberty
- when they develop the first signs of puberty abnormally early.

Controversial theories have been put forward, including watching too
much television could distort the hormonal balance of adolescents and
push many of them into early puberty.

Psychologists have said young girls who have close relationships with
their fathers might enter puberty later than girls with distant or
non-existent links.

Now 12 European teams are carrying out research as part of a
three-year project to get to the root of the problem, looking at the
most likely culprits.

Calories

Professor Olle S�der from the Karolinska Institute is leading one
study which will look at whether rising obesity rates are to blame.

His team will study whether animals that are overfed produce more of
the male and female sexual hormones that trigger puberty.

"We believe that this has a nutritional background and that the
obesity explosion we have seen in the US, and which is coming to
Europe, is important," he said.

Colleagues in Germany will gather data on around 50,000 children to
look at whether those who are plumper reach puberty earlier.

A London group will look at strains of mice renowned for early or late
onset of puberty and see whether they can modify this with diet.

Researchers have shown that overfed and rapidly growing newborn babies
go on to reach puberty earlier than other babies.

Also, adoption studies show undernourished children who have catch-up
growth after being placed with more affluent families have earlier
onset of puberty than siblings who remain in their home place.

Pesticides and pollution

"Another thing that might be important is environmental factors that
mimic hormones, such as pesticides," said Professor S�der.

A team of Belgian researchers pointed the finger at a chemical
derivative of the controversial pesticide DDT.

Jean-Pierre Bourguignon and colleagues from the University of Liege
found children who had emigrated from countries such as India and
Colombia were 80 times more likely to start puberty unusually young.

Three-quarters of these immigrant children with "precocious" puberty
had high levels of a chemical derivative of DDT in their blood.

However, there is no firm evidence. Some of the European researchers
will probe this further.

Equally, he said it might be down to genetics.

Genes

A team of researchers in the UK and the US recently pinpointed a gene
that they believe controls puberty through the regulation of a protein
called GPR54.

The US scientists, from Massachusetts General Hospital, found that the
gene that codes for GPR54 was mutated in all members of a Saudi
Arabian family who failed to reach puberty.

At the same time, scientists at the UK biotechnology company Paradigm
Therapeutics contacted the US doctors to tell them they had bred mice
that had failed to reach puberty.

They had "knocked out" the gene for GPR54 in these mice.

Regardless of whether it is down to one factor or many, it is not
clear whether children entering puberty earlier is a problem, said
Professor S�der.

Some say girls who reach puberty earlier are more likely to drop out
of school and have lower incomes.

Data shows that they are also more likely to become mums earlier.

With more and more women putting off having a baby until later life,
this might be a good thing and help reverse trends of top heavy ageing
population, said Professor S�der.

But equally, it might mean more women reach the menopause earlier too
and miss their chance to become a mum, he said.

Either way, "it will have a societal impact," he warned.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/4530743.stm




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