Short stature
Home care:
No particular care is indicated for short stature. If short stature is associated with a treatable medical condition, then the appropriate prescribed care should be undertaken.
Call your health care provider if:
- your child appears to be significantly shorter than the majority of children his or her age or if the rate of growth has decreased or stopped.
What to expect at your health care provider's office:
The medical history will be obtained and a physical examination performed.
Medical history questions documenting your symptom in detail may include: - family history
- How tall are the parents? grandparents?
- How tall are the siblings (brothers or sisters)?
- Are there other relatives that less than average height?
- Have any family members been diagnosed with a disorder associated with short stature (see the causes section of this document)?
- child's history
- Has the child begun to show signs of puberty?
- At what age did puberty signs begin?
- Has the child always been on the small side of the growth charts?
- Was the child growing normally and then the rate of growth began to slow?
- other
- What other symptoms are also present?
Physical examination: The height, weight, and arm and leg lengths will be measured in addition to a general physical examination. If the short stature appears to be a sign of some medical abnormality, further tests including laboratory studies and X-rays may be indicated.
Diagnostic tests: If the short stature appears to be familial in nature or merely delayed, no further evaluation will be made other than possibly a bone age X-ray to determine if the bone age is appropriate for the patient's height age. (If an child is 8 years old and is only as tall as a 6-year old, a bone age of 6 years would suggest that growth was merely delayed and that future height should be normal.)
After seeing your health care provider: Although your health care provider keeps records of height and weight from routine examinations, you may find it helpful to maintain your own records of the child's height and weight. You may want to bring these records to your health care provider's attention if the growth seems slow or the child seems small.
If a disorder was diagnosed by your health care provider as the cause of your child's short stature, you may want to note that diagnosis in your personal medical record.
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