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Reading Topic #3206

Nemo69 Nemo69 rating
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10-Aug-10, 09:11 AM (PST)
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"a disturbing study raises some questions...."
 
  
Study: Signs of Early Puberty in More Young Girls

Read more: http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,2009341,00.html?xid=rss-topstories#ixzz0wDhMz4K7
By Alice Park Monday, Aug. 09, 2010


A new study suggests that young girls are increasingly reaching puberty earlier — between 2004 and 2006 twice as many Caucasian girls showed breast maturity at age 7 as compared to 1997. The percentage of African-American girls showing the same early sign of puberty remained constant over the same time period.

The analysis, conducted by researchers collaborating in the multicenter Breast Cancer and the Environment Research Centers, adds to the growing evidence that the onset of puberty in girls may be shifting earlier and earlier, possibly due to obesity or exposure to environmental chemicals. (See how to prevent illness at any age.)

Early puberty is a concern, medically speaking, because the body's production of estrogen increases during sexual development, and longer exposure to estrogen is a risk factor for breast cancer. It is too soon to say whether the current generation of young girls, who are the first to show such early signs of puberty, will have a higher rate of cancer in adulthood. But the new study may help lay a foundation for answering that critical question in the years ahead.

The trial, whose results were published on Monday in Pediatrics, will continue to follow the girls for another five years, when most of them will experience menarche, the first period. Lead author Dr. Frank Biro, director of the division of adolescent medicine at Cincinnati Children's Hospital, hopes the ongoing study will help clarify the causes of early puberty. He speculates that its primary driver may be overweight and obesity, because estrogen is sequestered in fat tissue. But environmental exposures to chemicals — including pesticides and endocrine-disrupting chemicals like bisphenol A, commonly found in plastics, and phthalates, which are contained in many personal-care products — could also play a role.

Identifying those contributors may also help answer another important question about the timing of puberty: How early can it begin? The fact that the onset of puberty has not shifted earlier among African-American girls over the last decade, says Biro, may simply reflect the fact that they have reached the minimum biological age at which sexual development can occur. "How young can you go? Maybe white populations have not arrived at that biologic minimum," he says. (See "The Year in Health 2009.")

Looking ahead, Biro and others are eager to study the potential effects of early maturation on health as the girls in the study reach adulthood: If the longer duration of puberty affects fertility or cancer risk, for example, can these effects be controlled? (Comment on this story.)

For now, Biro's group is starting to analyze blood samples collected from the study participants in the hopes of identifying markers in the blood that would indicate early puberty. Those signs may help doctors recognize early puberty and become aware of its potential health consequences. "These findings are a wake-up call that we should be thinking about prevention and urging adolescents to come in for preventive visits, to get routine breast exams and learn to look for lumps and bumps," says Dr. Sarah Pitts, a pediatrician in the adolescent division of Children's Hospital Boston. "Time will only tell how early puberty will affect later health, but I do think the study makes it that much more important for people to go to [the] doctor and get regular physical exams so we can learn what those health issues might be."

Read more: http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,2009341,00.html?xid=rss-topstories#ixzz0wDgtkrBS

So if fat has estrogen, how come there are some horndogs on rb that are approaching 300 pounds?

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194670
Member since 5-Sep-08
4498 posts
10-Aug-10, 09:51 AM (PST)
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1. "RE: a disturbing study raises some questions...."
In response to message #0
 
I have read similar studies like this one. I remember reading one a few years back. They said it was because of how we are raising our food.

The study suggested that the amount of steroids that were put into our chicken, beef, pork and fish were what was causing it.

Don’t know if that’s true or not but it kind of made sense to me.

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digital_fortress digital_fortress rating
Member since 30-Dec-04
6213 posts, 32 feedbacks, 56 points
10-Aug-10, 03:21 PM (PST)
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2. "RE: a disturbing study raises some questions...."
In response to message #1
 

Steroids and hormones, yes...
It's rampant in dairy products, fast food, etc... the hormones are causing girls to get their periods at 8, 9, 10 yrs old.

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Elfen Elfen rating
Member since 5-Dec-05
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11-Aug-10, 10:22 AM (PST)
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3. "RE: a disturbing study raises some questions...."
In response to message #2
 
30 some odd years ago there was a young woman in the Bay Area who started her period at age 9 and had a baby at age 11. In parts of Mexico it has been common for decades for mere children to have babies as soon as they reach puberty, often long before age 12 or 13. (The girls cannot beg until they have a baby; the men do their "part" by getting the little girls pregnant and then sit around and wait for the girls to collect money begging.)

It stands to reason that growth hormones in some of our food contributes to the early development of women. Of course, Juliet of "Romeo and Juliet" fame was only 14.

It would be interesting to see if there has been a scientific study comparing the onset of puberty in people living in centuries past compared to people today.

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CLingus CLingus rating
Member since 30-Apr-10
891 posts, 12 feedbacks, 24 points
11-Aug-10, 12:14 PM (PST)
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4. "Not all bad"
In response to message #0
 
Maybe that means there will eventually be some younger (18+ jackass) fully developed gals on RB.

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