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Puberty is arriving ever younger in American females --
8 is no longer considered abnormal.
By Susan Brink, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
January 21, 2008
AT 8 or 9 years old, the typical American schoolgirl is
perfecting her cursive handwriting style. She's picking out nouns, verbs,
adjectives and adverbs in sentences, memorizing multiplication tables and
learning to read a thermometer.
She's a little girl with a lot to learn.
And yet, in increasing numbers, when girls
this age run across the playground in T-shirts, there is undeniable evidence
that their bodies are blossoming. The first visible sign of puberty, breast
budding, is arriving ever earlier in American girls.
Some parents and activists suspect environmental chemicals. Most pediatricians
and endocrinologists say that, though they have suspicions about the
environment, the only scientific evidence points to the obesity epidemic.
What's clear, however, is that the elements of female maturity increasingly
are spacing themselves out over months, even years -- and no one quite knows
why.
While early menstruation is a known risk factor for breast cancer, no one
knows what earlier breast development means for the future of girls' health.
"We're not backing up all events in puberty," says Sandra Streingraber,
biologist and visiting scholar at Ithaca College. "We're backing up the
starting point." She has examined the research on female puberty and compiled
a summary in an August 2007 report called "The Falling Age of Puberty in U.S.
Girls." The report was financed by the Breast Cancer Fund, an advocacy group
interested in exploring environmental causes of that disease.
Earlier breast development is now so typical that the Lawson Wilkins Pediatric
Endocrine Society urged changing the definition of "normal" development. Until
10 years ago, breast development at age 8 was considered an abnormal event
that should be investigated by an endocrinologist. Then a landmark study in
the April 1997 journal Pediatrics written by Marcia Herman-Giddens, adjunct
professor at the School of Public Health at the University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill, found that among 17,000 girls in North Carolina, almost half of
African Americans and 15% of whites had begun breast development by age 8. Two
years later, the society suggested changing what it considered medically
normal.
The new "8" -- the medically suggested definition for abnormally early breast
development -- is, the society says, 7 for white girls and 6 for African
American girls.
Through the ages
Puberty involves three stages: breast development, pubic hair growth and,
finally, menstruation. Because the final event is typically the most memorable
for women, it has been the one most scientifically documented in studies based
on self-reported memories. The first 100 years that medical records were kept
on the age of onset of menstruation saw continuous drops. Between about 1850
and 1950 in Europe, the average age of a girl's first period dropped from
about 17 to about 13. (The U.S. doesn't have good data earlier than the 20th
century, though trends were probably similar, says Steingraber, who prepared
the August 2007 report after examining hundreds of studies on potential
dietary, lifestyle and environmental causes of early puberty.)
Much of that decline probably has to do with better nutrition and public
health improvements that reduced the spread of infectious diseases. "Better
diet, closed sewer systems, deep burial of the dead," Steingraber says. "By
the beginning of the 20th century, those things were in place."
Adequate food and good health signal the brain that it's safe to reproduce,
according to theories of evolutionary biology. "We're healthier and we weigh
more," says Dr. Francine Kaufman, head of the center for diabetes and
endocrinology at Childrens Hospital. "In some ways, puberty is a luxury."
With the brain picking up these signals, the hormonal parade can begin, first
with the release from the hypothalamus of gonadotropin-releasing hormone,
which sends other hormones from the pituitary gland through the bloodstream to
the ovaries. The ovaries gear up production of a form of estrogen called
estradiol, which initiates breast development -- the first step in puberty.
A second signaling pathway stimulates the adrenal gland to begin androgen
production, which results in pubic hair. The final stage of puberty is the
beginning of monthly periods.
But the first two events are happening significantly earlier in the lives of
today's girls than they did in the lives of their mothers and grandmothers.
The age of first menstruation has dropped too, at a rate of about one month
per decade for the last 30 years, according to a January 2003 study in
Pediatrics. Today, the U.S. average for first period is 12.5 for white girls,
12.06 for black girls and 12.09 for Latinas.
The gap between the first appearance of breast buds and menstruation grew
wider by as much as a year and a half between the 1960s and the 1990s,
according to research published in the October 2006 journal Current Opinion in
Obstetrics and Gynecology. The time from breast buds to bleeding, according to
Herman-Giddens, is now close to three years.
In short, that finely tuned biological process may have reached a tipping
point. Since the 1960s, Herman-Giddens says, the decline in the age of
maturity has crossed the line from positive reasons, such as better diet, to
negative ones, such as eating too much, exercising too little and the vast
unknowns of chemical pollution.
The lack of adequate explanation has some experts worried. "Over the course of
a few decades, the childhoods of U.S. girls have been significantly
shortened," Steingraber says.
Redefining 'average'
The new average age of puberty, some fear, may be like the new average weight
-- typical, but terrible.
"My fear," Herman-Giddens says, "is that medical groups could take the data
and say 'This is normal. We don't have to worry about it.' My feeling is that
it is not normal. It's a response to an abnormal environment."
Dr. Paul Kaplowitz, chief of endocrinology at
Children's National Medical Center in Washington, D.C., and lead author of a
special article Oct. 4, 1999, in the journal Pediatrics suggesting a
redefinition of early puberty, isn't so sure. Too many girls are being labeled
abnormal, he contends.
"Maybe we shouldn't be worrying so much about those girls," he says. "The chance
of finding a serious condition in a 7-year-old with pubic hair is very, very
small."
There have always been rare cases of extremely early puberty, called precocious
puberty. One report, going back to 1834 in Butler County, Ky., was of a baby
girl whose hips and breasts began to grow soon after she was born. By the age of
1, she was menstruating and at age 10, she gave birth to a 7-pound baby. Such
extreme cases today would be examined and treated.
But the beginnings of breasts, and the first pubic hair, at ages 8, 7 or even 6
for African Americans falls at the low end of today's new normal range.
With statisticians proving that "average" is younger than recently thought,
environmental activists are asking whether hormones in food, pesticides in
produce or phthalates in plastics and cosmetics could be contributing to breast
buds in third-graders. Social scientists have lifestyle suspicions. Does the
stress of fatherless households, or the stimulating effects of sexually
suggestive television shows, have anything to do with earlier signs of puberty?
The suspicions remain difficult to prove.
Despite the reassurance of pediatric endocrinologists that younger development
is normal, a lot of parents are still nervous, Kaplowitz says.
"If somebody calls in and says, 'I've got an 8-year-old with breast buds,'
there's nothing I need to do," he says. "I discourage referrals. But they show
up anyway."
Kaplowitz examined evidence for all suspected environmental and lifestyle
factors in his book, "Early Puberty in Girls: The Essential Guide to Coping With
This Common Problem."
"The explanation for which there's the most evidence is that it's related to the
trend in increasing obesity," he says. "There are other factors, such as if your
mother matured early. Sometimes we simply don't know. But overall, the biggest
single factor is the trend toward obesity." Fatty tissue is a source of
estrogen, so chubbier girls are exposed to more estrogen.
"With environmental influences, there has been a lot of speculation, but little
hard data. I'm not suggesting there's no connection, but it's very hard to say
there's a proven connection. I think it's environmental mainly in the sense that
overeating and lack of exercise is environmental," Kaplowitz says. "I've tried
to take the view that we shouldn't be alarmed about this."
Herman-Giddens is not so convinced, but concedes that evidence for environmental
causes is close to impossible to obtain. "I myself am shocked sometimes to see
very thin girls, 8 and 9 years old, with breast development," she says. "But
with all the estrogen-like elements in the environment, it's virtually
impossible to study. There's no place to find an unexposed population."
The biggest concern, she says, is that earlier puberty means longer lifetime
exposure to estrogen, and early puberty, along with late menopause, is known to
increase the risk of breast cancer.
But to design a study in which some girls are deliberately exposed to higher
doses of such chemicals would be unethical, she says. Some animal studies
provide cause for concern about endocrine-disrupting chemicals, but little hard
evidence for humans. And a handful of industrial accidents have provided some
data. In 1973, for example, estrogenic chemicals were inadvertently mixed in
cattle feed in a Michigan community. The daughters of pregnant and nursing women
who ate meat and dairy products from the cows were studied and were found to
have begun their periods up to a year earlier than girls not exposed to the
chemical, according to a 2000 study in the journal Epidemiology.
Time for a talk
What's clear is that physical appearance is getting ahead of other aspects of
girls' maturity. They might be perceived as far older than they are, even when
they're still rummaging through their mothers' closets to clomp around in
oversized high heels.
"My daughter started developing breasts maybe around age 8," says Rhonda Sykes
of Inglewood. "She was still into her doll phase and dressing up to play." So
Sykes began having frank mother-daughter conversations about curves and changing
bodies a bit earlier than she expected.
"Whatever they look like, they know nothing," says Diana Zuckerman, president of
the National Research Center for Women and Families. "Eight- and 9-year olds are
learning to make change for a dollar. These are children who are learning the
most fundamental facts in school. Imagine trying to teach that child the
fundamentals of sex. They're not even playing Monopoly yet. They're still
playing Candyland."
The medical community calls earlier puberty normal, the trend goes hand in hand
with the obesity epidemic, and science has not yet pinpointed the reasons. And
yet, when girls who are still children in the minds of their parents start
developing breasts, many of their mothers remember that it happened later in
their own lives -- and wonder why.
Theorists and advocates continue to search for definitive evidence, and little
girls continue to look like young women at earlier ages. "My biologist brain
says, 'There's not a lot you can conclude from the [environmental] evidence,' "
Steingraber says. "But I've got a 9-year-old girl. And as a mother, I say,
'They've introduced all these chemicals into the environment, and they have no
idea what it's doing. What are they, nuts?' I want data demonstrating safety,
not data demonstrating ignorance."
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