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Adolescent growth: genes, hormones and the peer group

journal contribution
posted on 2014-05-07, 12:54 authored by Michael Hermanussen, T. Meitinger, J.D. Veldhuis, M.J. Low, R. Pfaffle, K. Staub, R. Panczak, Detlef Groth, M. Brabec, M. von Salisch, C.P.A. Loh, Vincent Tassenaar, Christiane Scheffler, Rebekka Mumm, Elena Godina, Andreas Lehmann, J. Tutkuviene, S. Gervickaite, A.F.M. Nierop, A. Holmgren, Christian Assmann, S. van Buuren, S. Koziel, E. Zadzinska, Maria Ines Varela Silva, J. Vignerova, E. Salama, Mortada El-Shabrawi, A. Huijic, Takashi Satake, Barry Bogin
The association between poverty, malnutrition, illness and poor socioeconomic conditions on the one side, and poor growth and short adult stature on the other side, is well recognized. Yet, the simple assumption by implication that poor growth and short stature result from poor living conditions, should be questioned. Recent evidence on the impact of the social network on adolescent growth and adult height further challenges the traditional concept of growth being a mirror of health. Twenty-nine scientists met at Glücksburg castle, Northern Germany, November 15th - 17th 2013, to discuss genetic, endocrine, mathematical and psychological aspects and related issues, of child and adolescent growth and final height.

History

School

  • Sport, Exercise and Health Sciences

Citation

HERMANUSSEN, M. ... et al., 2014. Adolescent growth: genes, hormones and the peer group. Pediatric Endocrinology Reviews (PER), 11 (3), pp. 341 - 353.

Publisher

© Y.S. Medical Media Ltd

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Publication date

2014

Notes

Closed access. This paper was published in the journal, Pediatric Endocrinology Reviews, as part of the Proceedings of the 20th Aschauer Soiree, held at Glücksburg castle, Germany, 15th to 17th November 2013. The publisher's website is at: http://www.medicalmedia.co.il/per/

ISSN

1565-4753

Language

  • en

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