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Randomized Controlled Trial
. 2012;77(4):241-9.
doi: 10.1159/000337975. Epub 2012 Apr 19.

When do short children realize they are short? Prepubertal short children's perception of height during 24 months of catch-up growth hormone treatment

Affiliations
Randomized Controlled Trial

When do short children realize they are short? Prepubertal short children's perception of height during 24 months of catch-up growth hormone treatment

John E Chaplin et al. Horm Res Paediatr. 2012.

Abstract

Aim: To examine perceived height during the first 24 months of growth hormone (GH) treatment in short prepubertal children.

Methods: Ninety-nine 3- to 11-year-old short prepubertal children with either isolated GH deficiency (n = 32) or idiopathic short stature (n = 67) participated in a 24-month randomized trial of individualized or fixed-dose GH treatment. Children's and parents' responses to three perceived height measures: relative height (Silhouette Apperception Test), sense of height (VAS short/tall), and judgment of appropriate height (yes/no) were compared to measured height.

Results: Children and parents overestimated height at start (72%, 54%) and at 24 months (52%, 30%). Short children described themselves as tall until 8.2 years (girls) and 9 years (boys). Prior to treatment, 38% of children described their height as appropriate and at 3 months, 63%. Mother's height, parental sense of the child's tallness and age explained more variance in children's sense of tallness (34%) than measured height (0%).

Conclusion: Short children and parents overestimate height; a pivotal age exists for comparative height judgments. Even a small gain in height may be enough for the child to feel an appropriate age-related height has been reached and to no longer feel short.

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