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T O P I C     R E V I E W
Undercover
Member # 12979
 - posted
Early-onset puberty raising health risks for girls

By Dorsey Griffith McClatchy/Tribune newspapers
September 16, 2007

SACRAMENTO - American girls are entering puberty at earlier ages, putting them at far greater risk for breast cancer later in life and for all sorts of social and emotional problems well before they reach adulthood.

Girls as young as 8 increasingly are starting to menstruate, develop breasts and grow pubic and underarm hair -- biological milestones that only decades ago typically occurred at 13 or older. African-American girls are especially prone to early puberty.

Theories abound as to what is driving the trend, but the exact cause, or causes, are not known. A new report, commissioned by the San Francisco-based Breast Cancer Fund, has gathered heretofore disparate pieces of evidence to help explain the phenomenon -- and spur efforts to help prevent it.

The stakes are high: "The data indicates that if you get your first period before age 12, your risk of breast cancer is 50 percent higher than if you get it at age 16," said the report's author, biologist Sandra Steingraber, herself a cancer survivor. "For every year we could delay a girl's first menstrual period, we could prevent thousands of breast cancers."

Dr. Marion Kavanaugh-Lynch, an Oakland oncologist, said most breast cancer cells thrive on estrogen, and girls who menstruate early are exposed to more estrogen.

Steingraber's paper, "The Falling Age of Puberty in U.S. Girls: What We Know, What We Need to Know," examines everything from obesity and inactivity to family stress, media imagery and exposures of girls to chemicals that can change the timing of sexual maturation.

Steingraber concludes that early puberty could best be understood as an "ecological disorder," resulting from a variety of environmental hits.

"The evidence suggests that children's hormonal systems are being altered by various stimuli, and that early puberty is the coincidental, non-adaptive outcome," she writes.

Steingraber's report is being released amid growing national interest in how the environment contributes to disease, particularly cancer.

For years, parents, doctors and teachers have recognized the trend in early puberty among girls, with little information to explain it.

Steingraber acknowledges that some of the shift in girls' puberty is evolutionary, a reflection of better infectious-disease control and improved nutrition, conditions that allow mammals to reproduce.

But rising childhood obesity rates clearly play a role, she said, and so may formula feeding of infants and excessive TV viewing and media use.

web page
 
Undercover
Member # 12979
 - posted
Hormonal triggering or altering ingredients content in many processed food and beverages brands are the direct culprit here.

And there is more and more evidence coming to light that the added growth hormone given to cows to increase milk production is at least partially responsible for this along with the growing use of Soy.

Estrogen is stored in adipose tissue. More adipose, more estrogen. And much of the excess food an overweight kid is likely to eat will include a lot of soy and its estrogenic effects.

This problem sadly is not only affecting girls today but men as well and one of the major contributors is Estrogen, or Estrogen impersonating chemicals they are putting in our food. If you look around you today you'll see how many of young kids 8,9 10 yrs that has big breats, big butts etc..This is not normal at all High Estrogen in men can make you fat, give you that doughy look, cause extreme fatigue (zaps your energy both physical and mental) enlarges your prostate and make you less manly.
 
Tigerlily
Member # 3567
 - posted
"The data indicates that if you get your first period before age 12, your risk of breast cancer is 50 percent higher than if you get it at age 16," said the report's author, biologist Sandra Steingraber,


I never heard of any girl having her first period that late.
 
MK the Most Interlectual
Member # 8356
 - posted
The fatter the girls, the earlier the menarche.
 
Mother War
Member # 8386
 - posted
^^^^^^ True^^^^^^

My cousin is very thin and was even moreso as an adolescent. She didn't have her period until she was 16.
 
Karah_Mia
Member # 4668
 - posted
quote:
Originally posted by MK the Most Interlectual:
The fatter the girls, the earlier the menarche.

I must have been VERY fat then! [Big Grin] [Big Grin]
 
MK the Most Interlectual
Member # 8356
 - posted
^^ Genetics also play a role ya KM.
 
MK the Most Interlectual
Member # 8356
 - posted
Ya3. I have just had a flashback of the miserable day I saw that crap in the barbatooz. What a trauma. And I go to mom and mom says oooh mabrook you're a young lady now. And I'm like what? Ladies sshit in their pants? [Confused]
 



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