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Review Meta Analysis
Growth and puberty in German children: is there still a positive secular trend?
- Bettina Gohlke and Joachim Woelfle.
- Pädiatrische Endokrinologie und Diabetologie, Abteilung für Allgemeine Pädiatrie am Zentrum für Kinderheilkunde der Universität Bonn, Germany.
- Dtsch Arztebl Int. 2009 Jun 1; 106 (23): 377-82.
BackgroundSince the mid-19th century, growth in German children has accelerated and final height increased. Possible causes of this secular trend include improvements in nutrition, hygiene, and health care. While the upward secular trend still continues in some parts of the world, it seems to be slowing in industrialized countries.MethodsSelective literature review.ResultsReliable data on growth that have been published since the middle of the 19th century reveal an increase in final height by 1 to 2 cm per decade in most European countries. Recent epidemiological studies, however, suggest that human height may be nearing an upper limit, beyond which it cannot increase even with further improvements in nutrition and health care. In Germany and other northern European countries, the upward trend in final height has slowed significantly over the last 30 years; in Germany, it now stands at less than 1 cm/decade. In the same interval, the age at menarche has remained constant at just under 13 years (currently 12.8).ConclusionsIn Germany, as elsewhere in northern Europe, the upward secular trend in height is slowing (ca. 2 cm/decade up to the mid-20th century, currently less than 1 cm/decade), and the age at menarche has stabilized at just under 13 years. It remains an open question whether the observed slowing will merely be temporary, or whether it indeed represents the near-attainment of an endpoint owing to relatively stable environmental conditions.
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