15. Physiology of puberty
name two types of precocious puberty
1) central/true precocious puberty 2) peripheral/pseudo precocious puberty
what are the three main changes that occur during puberty
1) growth spurt 2) secondary sexual characteristics develop 3) menarche/spermatogenesis
what is the average age a girl starts her periods
10-16
in girls what is the average age to start puberty?
10.9 years (8.5-13.3)
describe the average age of puberty in boys
11.2 (9.2-14.2)
an increase of which hormone stimulates the adrenals to grow pubic hair and axillary hair
ACTH
what is the active from of testosterone, which is converted in the target organs?
DHT
what is the treatment for central/true precocious puberty?
GnRH agonist - stops pubertal progression (p.gland ignores signals from the hypothalamus which prevents the stimulation of the ovaries). Treatment is stopped at age 10-12 and then puberty progression will resume.
during puberty explain the change of GnRH control
before puberty= GnRH is supressed by natural mechanisms age 6-9= pulsatile nocturnal release of GnRH every 90-120 minutes
what is the most common cause of pseudo-precocious puberty
congenital adrenal hyperplasia
what does therlarche mean?
early development of breasts around age 2-3
what does adrenarche mean?
early development of pubic hair
what age is considered "early puberty" in girls and boys
girls=under 8 boys=under 9
describe what central/true precocious puberty is
gonadotrophin dependent premature activation of the HPG axis.
describe what pseudo-precocious puberty is
gonadotrophin independent the gonads develop independently of GnRH - no normal pattern of puberty, testosterone, LH and FSH are high.
describe the development that occurs in girls in chronological order
growth spurt-->breast growth-->pubic hair growth-->axillary hair-->menstruation
explain how GnRH levels effect LH and FSH levels
increase in GnRH= increase in LH and FSH
name 3 causes of delayed puberty
klinefelters syndrome, turners syndrome, gonadotrophin deficiency
androgens are produced by which cell under the control of which hormone?
leydig cells under LH control
if someone has gonadotrophin deficiency what is the treatment?
lifelong testosterone replacement therapy
why is early puberty worying?
may be a sinister underlying cause, eg swelling of hypothalamus (80% of boys) , emotional and psycho-social difficulties,decreased adult height
what age is considered delayed puberty in males and females?
over 14
describe the ovarian cycle
primary oocyte (within follicle)-->growth of follicle-->mature follicle-->follicle ruptures-->secondary oocyte is released-->corpus luteum forms-->corpus luteum degenerates-->primary oocyte forms
sperm is produced by which cells under the control of which hormone?
sertoli cells under FSH control
name the triad associated with turners syndrome which causes delayed puberty
short stature, streak gonads, primary amenorrhoea
describe what happens to boys during puberty in chronological order
testicular volume increases-->penile length-->pubic hair-->growth spurt--> axillary/facial hair-->deep voice
describe what is meant by "precocious puberty"
the presence of true pubertal features at a young/inappropriate age
define the term "puberty"
the stage of physical maturation in which an individual becomes physiological capable of procreation.
why is delayed puberty a concern?
underlying cause, far puberty will never occur, emotional and psychosocial upset, short stature, reduced bone mineralisation