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Delayed puberty (patient information)

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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]; Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Jinhui Wu, M.D., Eiman Ghaffarpasand, M.D. [2]

Overview

Puberty is the time when your body grows from a child’s to an adult’s. During puberty, children’s external genitalia begin development and show secondary sex characteristics. The normal age of puberty is between 7 and 13 for girls and 9 and 15 for boys. Some adolescents do not start their sexual development at the usual age. They do not show any signs of body changes. This is called delayed puberty. The delay in some cases represents a normal variation, but other causes are some kind of diseases, such as diabetes, inflammatory bowel disease, kidney disease, cystic fibrosis, mumps, anemia, and genetic diseases. Tests such as hormone level tests and bone age X-ray test, even cranial CT or MRI and chromosomal analysis may help find the causes of delayed puberty. Treatment and prognosis of delayed puberty depend on the cause.

What are the Symptoms of Delayed Puberty?

Delayed puberty is more common among boys. Usual symptoms in boys and girls are:

What Causes Delayed Puberty?

Who is at Highest Risk for Delayed Puberty?

Children with the following conditions are at higher risk for delayed puberty:

Diagnosis

When to Seek Urgent Medical Care?

  • Contact your doctor if your child has signs and symptoms that seem to suggest delayed puberty.

Treatment Options

The treatment for delayed puberty depends on its cause. Different cause has different protocol.

  • An adolescent who is naturally late in developing needs no treatment.

Where to Find Medical Care for Delayed Puberty?

Directions to Hospitals Treating delayed puberty

Prevention

What to Expect (Outook/Prognosis)?

Prognosis of delayed puberty depends on the cause of the disease. Outcome of patients with delayed puberty resulting from tumors is worse than outcomes from other causes.

Possible Complications

Copyleft Sources

http://www.merck.com/mmhe/print/sec23/ch271/ch271b.html

http://kidshealth.org/teen/sexual_health/changing_body/delayed_puberty.html

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Want to know more?

A more detailed clinical article for the same condition is available from WikiDoc. It is written for medical professionals and uses technical language.

Read the full WikiDoc article

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