Vimpani G V, Vimpani A F, Pocock S J, Farquhar J W
Arch Dis Child. 1981 Dec;56(12):922-8. doi: 10.1136/adc.56.12.922.
Four hundred and forty-nine children with heights below -2.5 SD were identified by screening for height a total population of 48221 in three Scottish cities. Children participating in the study could be classified into 5 groups: severe growth hormone deficiency (n = 13), partial growth hormone deficiency (n = 25), low birthweight short stature (n = 34), constitutional short stature (n = 178), and short stature associated with some underlying disease (n = 106). Children with growth hormone deficiency tended to be shorter, were more likely to be obese, were growing more slowly, more often were the products of an abnormal pregnancy, and were less socially disadvantaged than constitutionally short children. Their parents were also more likely to have sought medical advice about the short stature. These findings have important implications for improved case-finding of children suffering from growth-hormone deficiency, who in this study accounted for about 10% of all short but otherwise normal children who came from non-disadvantaged communities.
在对苏格兰三个城市的48221名儿童进行身高筛查时,共识别出449名身高低于-2.5标准差的儿童。参与该研究的儿童可分为5组:严重生长激素缺乏(n = 13)、部分生长激素缺乏(n = 25)、低出生体重矮小(n = 34)、体质性矮小(n = 178)以及与某些潜在疾病相关的矮小(n = 106)。生长激素缺乏的儿童往往更矮,更有可能肥胖,生长速度更慢,更多是异常妊娠的产物,并且与体质性矮小的儿童相比,社会不利因素较少。他们的父母也更有可能就矮小问题寻求过医疗建议。这些发现对于改善生长激素缺乏儿童的病例发现具有重要意义,在本研究中,生长激素缺乏儿童占所有来自非弱势社区的身材矮小但其他方面正常儿童的约10%。