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ORIGINAL RESEARCH COMMUNICATION |
1 From the Lifespan Health Research Center, Wright State University School of Medicine, Dayton, OH
Background: A decline in the age at menarche was recently reported for US girls. Although it is possible that this recent drop stems from the concurrent increase in childhood obesity, few longitudinal studies of growth and development have been undertaken to specifically address the temporal relation between growth, adiposity, and the age at menarche.
Objective: The objective was to simultaneously examine the effects of birth cohort (secular trend) and rate of maturation (age at menarche) on the timing and pattern of increases in body mass index (BMI) during adolescence in girls.
Design: We applied mixed-effects polynomial models to serial BMI data, spanning from 6 y before menarche to 6 y after menarche, obtained from 211 girls enrolled in the Fels Longitudinal Study. We examined the effects of birth cohort (defined as girls born 19291946, 19471964, and 19651983) and age at menarche (defined as
11.9 y, 12.013.1 y, and
13.2 y) on the magnitude and velocity of BMI during adolescence.
Results: BMI and BMI velocity in girls born after 1965 were significantly greater than those of girls of earlier birth cohorts, despite stability in the mean age at menarche. Although girls with early menarche tended to have significantly higher BMIs than did girls with average or later menarche, these differences did not emerge until after menarche.
Conclusion: These data suggest that increases in relative weight are a consequence, rather than a determinant, of the age at menarche and that secular changes in BMI and in the mean age at menarche could be independent phenomena.
Key Words: Body mass index menarche longitudinal studies cohort effect body composition growth sex maturation female children adolescence United States
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