Researchers studied data on nearly 7,800 women who had their first
menstrual cycle at an average age of 12. The women were interviewed
four times, starting around age 16 and continuing until about age
28.
Girls who went through puberty earlier than most were more likely to
become depressed, and their symptoms were also more severe in
adolescence, the study found.
The younger the age at the first period, the stronger the
association between early puberty and mental health problems; it was
stronger for girls who started menstruation at age 8 than at age 10,
for example.
With earlier puberty, girls were also more likely to have behavior
issues that led to things like stealing, lying, breaking into
buildings and selling drugs. The link lasted into young adulthood.
“Interestingly, the magnitude of the association between puberty and
these psychological difficulties remains stable, meaning that
puberty is as strongly associated with depressive symptoms and
antisocial behavior during adulthood as it is during adolescence,”
said lead study author Jane Mendle, a researcher at Cornell
University in Ithaca, New York.
“This suggests that the psychological vulnerability of earlier
puberty lingers longer than we previously may have expected,” Mendle
said by email. “It’s not simply a question of adolescent growing
pains.”
Sweeping changes in biology, appearance, self-perception and emotion
combine to make puberty one of the most pivotal phases of
development during the life span, the researchers note in
Pediatrics. Although puberty can be a challenging time for all
adolescents, it can be a particularly vulnerable time for girls who
physically mature ahead of their peers.
Because physical maturation is linked to changes in social roles and
relationships, this has long been linked to difficulties coping with
new changes and stressors in life as well as changes in the brain
that can make youth exceptionally vulnerable to mental health and
behavior difficulties.
Researchers examined data from the National Longitudinal Study of
Adolescent Health, a nationally representative study that includes
youth from a broad range of racial, ethnic and socioeconomic
backgrounds. The interviews examined in the current study were
conducted in four waves from 1994 to 2008.
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Questions focused on the timing of menstruation and also touched on
symptoms of depression that the teens had experienced in the past
week and the frequency of so-called anti-social behaviors like
lying, stealing and dealing drugs.
Young women who experienced depression as adults may have been at
risk because they were more likely to start experiencing these
symptoms during adolescence and remained at risk over time, the
study concludes.
With antisocial behaviors, the increased risk of acting out in
adulthood after experiencing an early puberty wasn’t as pronounced
as it was for depression.
The study wasn’t a controlled experiment designed to prove whether
or how early puberty might influence the risk of depression or
behavior problems in adolescence or later in life.
It’s also possible that a variety of factors not examined in the
study, such as the impact of early puberty on academics or
friendships, might at least in part explain the reason puberty
timing appeared tied to the risk of depression and behavior
problems, the authors note.
“From a social standpoint, girls who develop early tend to be
treated like they are older than they really are,” said Dr. Ellen
Selkie, author of an accompanying editorial and an adolescent
medicine specialist at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor.
Sometimes, that means they might hang out with older kids to try to
fit in, Selkie said by email.
“But that also means they could be involved in things that they
aren’t really mature enough for,” Selkie added. “That sense of not
really belonging can lead to mood problems and acting out - which we
know can set up a pattern of behavior that leads to adult problems
as well.”
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