CMHO Home : News, Jobs and Events : View Clinical News Article
Bookmark and Share
Early Puberty Linked to Depression
Rate this article:

(Rated 0 Stars)

Traci Pedersen

Psychcentral
Date Published: Monday, June 4, 2012
View printable version

Going through early puberty puts a child at greater risk for anxiety and depressionlater in adolescence, according to researchers at the University of Melbourne.

By studying magnetic resonance images of the brains of 155 adolescents (ages 12, 15, and 18), researchers discovered that participants who went through puberty earlier than their peers had a larger pituitary gland and were in turn more prone to depression in their later teen years.

The pituitary gland is the part of the brain that triggers puberty.

The lead researcher, Sarah Whittle, Ph.D., said the results indicate there may be a biological reason why children — especially girls — who go through early puberty are more likely to experience depression in young adulthood.

Previously, the ongoing theory suggested it was a largely social problem caused by being teased about early development.

The pituitary gland sends out the hormones that trigger the physical and emotional changes that go with puberty. But the gland also plays a vital role in the brain’s stress mechanism, so it may be that early puberty causes the gland to be overstimulated, weakening the ability for young people to cope with stress.

”These [pubertal] changes are actually having particularly long-term effects on the brain structure, where the brain is plastic and can change shape,” Whittle said.

George Patton, Ph.D., a professor of adolescent health at the Murdoch Children’s Research Institute, said where puberty was once thought to start with the first signs of physical changes, researchers now know that hormonal changes associated with puberty can begin in children as young as 7. In turn, this may affect their emotional development and stress-coping abilities.

Source: University of Melbourne

Bookmark and Share

Comments (0)


(Please note that CMHO staff does not reply to comments that are posted on news stories.)


Leave a comment

Your name (required, minimum 3, maximum 255 characters) (checked.gif Remember)
Email Address (required)
Your message (required, minimum 3, maximum 5000 characters)
 
*Anti-Spam
CAPTCHA Image
Reload Image

Please enter the security code shown above:

News, Jobs and Events