Growth Fundamentals - Charting the Heights
- Monitor: IAP charts (WHO <5y, IAP >5y).
- Height Velocity (HV):
- Prepubertal: 5-6 cm/yr.
- Pubertal: Girls 8-10 cm/yr, Boys 10-12 cm/yr.
- Mid-Parental Height (MPH):
- Boys: $(H_{F} + H_{M} + 13)/2$ cm.
- Girls: $(H_{F} + H_{M} - 13)/2$ cm.
- Target range: MPH $\pm$ 8.5 cm.
- Bone Age (BA): X-ray L hand/wrist (Greulich-Pyle).

⭐ A fall-off from a previously established growth percentile (height or HV) is more significant than a single low measurement.
Short Stature - Little Sprout Issues
Height < -2 SD or < 3rd percentile for age & sex; or growth velocity < 25th percentile over 1 year.
Initial Assessment:
- History (birth, nutrition, family Hx, systemic illness)
- Exam: Anthropometry (height, weight, HC), U/L segment ratio, dysmorphism
- Bone Age (X-ray left hand & wrist)
- Mid-Parental Height (MPH) Target Range:
- Boys: $(Father's Ht_{cm} + Mother's Ht_{cm} + 13) / 2 \pm 8.5 cm$
- Girls: $(Father's Ht_{cm} + Mother's Ht_{cm} - 13) / 2 \pm 8.5 cm$
Key Investigations:
- CBC, ESR, Urinalysis, KFT, LFT, Celiac serology
- TSH, Free T4, IGF-1, IGFBP-3
- Karyotype (all girls with unexplained short stature)
- GH stimulation tests (if IGF-1 low/borderline & other causes excluded)
⭐ Turner Syndrome (45,XO) is a key cause of unexplained short stature in girls; always consider karyotyping. Early GH therapy improves final height.
📌 Mnemonic: SHORT
- Systemic illness / Skeletal dysplasia
- Hypothyroidism / Hormonal (GHD, Cushing)
- Others (Psychosocial, IUGR/SGA)
- Renal (CKD) / Rickets
- Turner's / T familial (FSS, CDGP - constitutional delay)
Tall Stature - Giant Growth Tales
- Definition: Height > 2 SD or > 97th percentile for age & sex.
- Evaluation: Family Hx, growth velocity, Bone Age (BA) assessment.
- Causes:
- Familial (most common).
- Endocrine: GH excess (Gigantism), Precocious Puberty (initial ↑ height), Hyperthyroidism.
- Genetic: Marfan Syndrome, Klinefelter Syndrome, Sotos Syndrome, Beckwith-Wiedemann Syndrome.
- 📌 Gigantism: GH excess before epiphyseal fusion; Acromegaly after.

⭐ Sotos Syndrome: Macrocephaly, advanced BA, distinctive facies (prominent forehead, pointed chin), intellectual disability often present.
Key Syndromes - Growth's Unique IDs
- Short Stature Syndromes:
- Turner S. (45,XO): Webbed neck, shield chest, ovarian dysgenesis, coarctation.
- Noonan S. (PTPN11): Turner-like, pulmonary stenosis, pectus carinatum.
- Prader-Willi S. (15q del): Neonatal hypotonia, hyperphagia, obesity, hypogonadism.
- Russell-Silver S. (Chr7/11): IUGR, triangular face, asymmetry, normal HC.
- Tall Stature Syndromes:
- Klinefelter S. (47,XXY): Eunuchoid, gynecomastia, small testes, infertility.
- Marfan S. (FBN1): Arachnodactyly, ectopia lentis, aortic dilation.
- Sotos S. (NSD1): Macrocephaly, advanced bone age, ID.
- Beckwith-Wiedemann S. (11p15): Macrosomia, macroglossia, omphalocele, hemihypertrophy.
⭐ BWS requires regular screening for Wilms' tumor & hepatoblastoma (↑risk).
Diagnostic Path - Growth Clue Hunt
⭐ Growth velocity < 4 cm/yr (4 yrs-puberty) or < P25 is a red flag.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Familial Short Stature (FSS): Normal bone age & growth velocity; matches parental height.
- Constitutional Delay (CDGP): Delayed bone age, normal growth velocity; family history of late bloomers.
- GH Deficiency: Delayed bone age, ↓ growth velocity, ↓ IGF-1; confirm with GH stimulation tests.
- Turner Syndrome (XO): Short stature in females, webbed neck, streak ovaries; karyotype is key.
- Achondroplasia: Commonest skeletal dysplasia; disproportionate short stature, rhizomelia.
- Hypothyroidism: Growth failure, delayed bone age, ↑ TSH, ↓ T4; treat with levothyroxine.
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