Risk factors for puberty (adolescence) and precocious puberty

Risk factors for puberty (adolescence) and precocious puberty

Puberty risk factors

Ninu ọmọbirin naa

  • Idagbasoke igbaya
  • The appearance of sexual hair
  • The appearance of hair under the armpits and on the legs
  • The growth of the labia minora.
  • Horizontalization of the vulva.
  • The voice change (less important than in boys)
  • A very significant growth in size
  • Increase in hip circumference
  • More sweating in the armpits and sexual area.
  • The appearance of white discharge
  • The onset of the first period (on average two years after the onset of the first signs of puberty)
  • The onset of sexual desire

Ninu ọmọkunrin naa

  • The development of the testicles and then the penis.
  • The change in coloring of the scrotum.
  • Very significant growth, particularly in terms of size
  • The appearance of sexual hair
  • The appearance of hair under the armpits and on the legs
  • The appearance of a mustache, then a beard
  • Shoulder enlargement
  • The increase in musculature
  • The appearance of the first ejaculations, usually nocturnal and involuntary
  • The change of the voice which becomes more serious
  • The onset of sexual desire

People at risk and risk factors for precocious puberty

Girls are more affected than boys by the tete ìbàlágà.

awọnisanraju would be a risk factor for tete ìbàlágà. Certain medications could also be responsible for advanced puberty. Endocrine disruptors present in the environment are also referred to as increasingly frequent factors of precocious puberty.

“Puberty is a time in life when you go to bed at night without knowing how you will wake up the next day …” as the child psychiatrist Marcel Rufo sometimes puts it. It’s scary for a teenager. This is why the role of parents is at least to warn each child of the changes that await them. White discharge for girls and the enlargement of the labia minora are often the cause of anxiety. For boys, explaining to them the changes in their sex and the onset of ejaculation should be part of any self-respecting father’s role. It also seems essential to send them the message that the sexual areas are precious and respectable places of the body and that in case of difficulty, they can either talk to the parents or ask to see a doctor to ask questions without fear the intrusiveness of parents if they wish to keep a distance.

 

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