Evaluates short stature and growth velocity with bone age interpretation and endocrine workup. Use when evaluating growth disorders, interpreting growth curves, or ordering growth workup.
Evaluates short stature, tall stature, and abnormal growth velocity using WHO/CDC growth chart analysis, bone age radiography interpretation, mid-parental height targeting, endocrine workup algorithms, and criteria for growth hormone therapy referral. Differentiates normal variants (familial short stature, constitutional delay) from pathologic causes requiring intervention.
Growth is the most sensitive indicator of a child's overall health. Deceleration in height velocity may be the first sign of celiac disease, hypothyroidism, growth hormone deficiency, Turner syndrome, or chronic systemic illness — often preceding other symptoms by months or years. Conversely, many children evaluated for short stature have normal variants (familial short stature or constitutional delay of growth and puberty) requiring only reassurance. This skill enforces systematic differentiation between normal and pathologic growth patterns and prevents both under-investigation of worrisome trajectories and unnecessary endocrine workup for normal variants.
| Age | Normal Height Velocity (cm/year) |
|---|---|
| 0-1 year | 23-27 |
| 1-2 years | 10-14 |
| 2-3 years | 7.5-10 |
| 3 years to puberty | 5-7 |
| Puberty (girls) | 8-12 (peak at Tanner 2-3) |
| Puberty (boys) | 10-14 (peak at Tanner 3-4) |
Height velocity < 4 cm/year in a prepubertal child aged 3+ years is abnormal and requires workup.
| Finding | Bone Age Relative to Chronological Age | Suggests |
|---|---|---|
| Normal variant short stature (FSS) | Bone age = chronological age | Familial short stature; adult height near MPH |
| Constitutional delay (CDGP) | Bone age delayed (by 1-3 years) | Constitutional delay of growth and puberty; will be a "late bloomer"; adult height often normal |
| Pathologic short stature | Bone age delayed + poor growth velocity | GH deficiency, hypothyroidism, chronic disease, Turner syndrome |
| Bone age advanced | Bone age > chronological age | Precocious puberty, CAH, hyperthyroidism |
| Test | Purpose |
|---|---|
| CBC | Chronic disease, anemia |
| CMP | Renal disease, electrolyte abnormalities |
| TSH and free T4 | Hypothyroidism |
| Celiac panel (tTG-IgA + total IgA) | Celiac disease (may present with isolated short stature) |
| ESR or CRP | Chronic inflammatory disease (IBD, JIA) |
| IGF-1 and IGFBP-3 | GH axis screening (age- and Tanner-adjusted reference ranges) |
| Bone age (left hand/wrist) | Skeletal maturity |
| Clue | Test |
|---|---|
| Female with unexplained short stature | Karyotype (Turner syndrome — 45,X — occurs in 1:2500 girls; may have no other features) |
| Dysmorphic features | Chromosomal microarray or targeted genetic testing |
| Disproportionate limbs | Skeletal survey, FGFR3 testing (achondroplasia) |
| Midline defects, neonatal hypoglycemia | Pituitary MRI |
| Low IGF-1 | GH stimulation testing (clonidine, arginine, or glucagon stim — performed by endocrinology) |
| Obesity + short stature + striae | AM cortisol, 24-hour urine free cortisol (Cushing syndrome) |
| Precocious puberty signs + advanced bone age | LH, FSH, estradiol/testosterone |
| Chronic GI symptoms | Upper/lower endoscopy (celiac, IBD) |
| Item | Requirement | Pass? |
|---|---|---|
| Serial measurements | ≥ 3 height data points plotted with velocity calculated | |
| Growth chart selection | WHO < 2 years; CDC 2-20 years | |
| MPH calculation | Both parents' heights used; target range plotted | |
| Bone age | Obtained and interpreted with comparison to chronological age | |
| Velocity assessment | cm/year calculated and compared to age norms | |
| Tier 1 labs | CBC, CMP, TSH, celiac, IGF-1 all addressed | |
| Turner screening | Karyotype considered for short females | |
| Proportionality | Upper-to-lower segment ratio assessed (disproportionate = skeletal dysplasia) | |
| Pubertal staging | Tanner stage documented | |
| No unexplained [VERIFY] tags | All flagged items resolved or escalated |