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Adolescence 8th edition. Insert Photo from DAL. Chapter One: Biological Transitions. By Laurence Steinberg, Ph.D. Chapter 1 Overview. What is puberty? What is the endocrine system? What triggers puberty? What are the physical changes of puberty?
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Adolescence8th edition Insert Photo from DAL Chapter One: Biological Transitions By Laurence Steinberg, Ph.D.
Chapter 1 Overview • What is puberty? • What is the endocrine system? • What triggers puberty? • What are the physical changes of puberty? • Variations in the timing and tempo of puberty • What is the psychosocial impact of puberty? • Early vs. Late maturation • Eating disorders • Physical health in adolescence
Puberty: An Introduction • From Latin word pubertas (adult) • Period of lifespan in which an individual becomes capable of sexual reproduction • Hormones regulated by the endocrine system lead to physical changes • No new hormones are produced and no new bodily systems develop at puberty
The Endocrine System • Produces, circulates, and regulates hormone levels in the body • Hormones • Substances secreted by endocrine glands • Glands • Organs that stimulate particular parts of the body to respond in specific ways • Feedback loop (HPG axis) • Set point (Example: thermostat)
The Endocrine System: HPG Feedback Loop • HPG Axis: • Hypothalamus • Pituitary gland (master gland) • Gonads (testes and ovaries) • Gonads release sex hormones into bloodstream • Androgens and estrogens
What Triggers Puberty? • Although no new hormones in adolescence, something signals the HPG axis to kick on • Presence of mature sexual partners • Nutritional resources • Leptin may be the most important signal • Protein produced by fat cells • Must accumulate enough body fat (~11%) • Rising levels of leptin signal hypothalamus to stop inhibiting puberty (at least in females) • Adrenarche • Maturation of adrenal glands leads to physical (somatic) changes
What Role Do Hormones Play? • Organizing Role • Prenatal hormones “program” the brain to be masculine or feminine (like setting an alarm clock) • Patterns of behavior as a result of this organization may not appear until adolescence (Ex: sex differences in aggression) • Activating Role • Increase in certain hormones at puberty activates physical changes (Ex: secondary sex characteristics)
Puberty is Affected by Context • Timing of physical changes in adolescence varies by • Regions of the world • Socioeconomic class • Ethnic group • Historical era • Example: Menarche (first menstruation) • U.S. average 12 to 13 years • Lumi (New Guinea) average > 18 years Insert picture from DAL
What Are The 5 MajorPhysical Changes of Puberty? • Adolescent growth spurt • Development of primary sex characteristics (gonads) • Development of secondary sex characteristics (breasts, pubic hair) • Changes in body composition • Changes in circulation and respiration
Physical Changes of Puberty:Adolescent Growth Spurt • Adolescent growth spurt • Rapid acceleration in growth (height and weight) • Simultaneous release of growth hormones, thyroid hormones, and androgens • Peak Height Velocity (Time that adolescent is growing most quickly) • Average female growth spurt is 2 years earlier than the average male growth spurt
What Are The Physical Changes of Puberty? • Changes in body composition • Relative proportions of body fat/muscle change • Different for boys (more muscle) and girls (more fat) • Skeletal changes(Bones become harder, denser, more brittle) • Closing of ends of long bones (epiphysis) • Asymmetry of growth • Circulatory and respiratory changes • Size and capacity of heart and lungs • Exercise tolerance
Sexual Maturation: Overview • Development of secondary sex characteristics • Measured in boys and girls by Tanner Stages • Changes include • growth of pubic hair • changes in appearance of sex organs • breast development
Sexual Maturation: Boys • Spermarche typically occurs 1 year after accelerated penis growth • Boys capable of fathering a child before they look like adults; opposite true for girls
Sexual Maturation: Girls • Sequence less regular than in boys • Menarche typically occurs after other secondary sex characteristics; regular ovulation follows 2 years later • Thus, girls appear physically mature before they are actually capable of reproduction
Variations in the Timing and Tempo of Puberty • No specific average age at onset or duration of puberty • No relation between the age at which puberty begins and the rate of pubertal development • Timing (early or late) and adult stature • Small effect: late maturers slightly taller as adults, early maturing girls slightly heavier as adults • Childhood height and weight • Stronger correlation with adult height and weight
Individual Differences in Pubertal Maturation • Pubertal maturation • Interaction between genes and environment • Differences in timing/rate among individuals in the same general environment result chiefly from genetic factors • Two key environmental influences • Nutrition • Health • Exposure to pheromones Insert photo from DAL
Group Differences in Pubertal Maturation • Typically studied by comparing average age of menarche • Across countries • Age at menarche lower when not malnourished (Ex: Africa and United States) • Among SES groups within a country • Affluent girls reach menarche before disadvantaged girls • Within same populations but different eras
Group Differences in Pubertal Maturation • Secular trend (group trend within same region) • Leveling off in industrialized nations • Better sanitation, control of infectious diseases • U.S. average age of menarche has not changed in 30 years • Onset of puberty has continued to occur earlier among African-American girls in the United States
Group Differences in Pubertal Maturation • Secular trend (group trend within same region) • Leveling off in industrialized nations • Better sanitation, control of infectious diseases • U.S. average age of menarche has not changed in 30 years • Onset of puberty has continued to occur earlier among African-American girls in the United States
The biological changes of puberty can affect the adolescent’s behavior in at least three ways
How Do Researchers Study The Psychosocial Consequences of Puberty? • Groups compared at different stages of puberty • Cross-sectional study design • Longitudinal study design • Same adolescents tracked over time • Comparison of early vs. late maturers • When interested in the effects of pubertal timing on psychosocial outcomes
The Immediate Impact of Puberty • Self-esteem varies by gender and ethnicity • Adolescent moodiness • More fluctuations throughout the day than adults • Not solely due to hormones • Changes in patterns of sleep • Delayed phase preference and later melatonin secretion • Environmental influences and school start times • Family relationships • Peer relationships
The Psychosocial Impact of Specific Pubertal Events • Most adolescents react positively to pubertal changes • especially secondary sex characteristics • Reactions to menarche are varied • but less negative than in the past • Less known about boys’ reactions to first ejaculations Insert photo from DAL
Psychosocial Impact of Early or Late Maturation: Boys • Perception of being an early or late maturer is more important in affecting one’s feelings than the reality • Pros of early maturation • Popularity, better self-esteem • More responsible, cooperative, sociable later in adulthood • Cons of early maturation • More drug and alcohol use, precocious sexual activity, greater impact of victimization • Less creative, more humorless in later adulthood
Psychosocial Impact of Early or Late Maturation: Girls • Compared to early maturing boys, early maturing girls have more difficulties • Maturational deviance hypothesis • Developmental readiness hypothesis • Cultural and contextual factors (valuing thinner body types) • Pros of early maturation • Popularity with boys • Cons of early maturation • Heavier and shorter stature later in life • Precocious sexual activity, lowered self-image, higher rates of depression, eating disorders, anxiety
Eating Disorders • Body Dissatisfaction • Higher among early maturing girls • Puberty brings rapid increase in body fat for girls • Obesity • The most common pattern of disordered eating among adolescents • Basal Metabolism Rate • Disordered eating • Patterns of eating, attitudes, and behaviors that are unhealthy.
Eating Disorders • Deviation from the “ideal” physique can lead to loss of self-esteem and other problems in the adolescent’s self-image • Studies of magazines, 1970 to 1990 • Ideal body shape became slimmer • Ideal body shape became less curvaceous
Marilyn Monroe Height: 5 feet 5 1/2 inchesWeight: Varied, approx. 120 lbs. Measurements: 37-23-36 Dress size: 12Pant Size: 8 Kate Moss Height: 5 feet 6 inchesWeight: 105 lbs. Measurements: 33-23-35 Dress size: 4Pant Size: 2
Eating Disorders • Characterized by: • severe disturbance in eating behavior • Intense fear of becoming overweight which leads to the pursuit of thinness • This fear is relentless and may become deadly • Types of Adult Eating Disorders: • Anorexia Nervosa • Bulimia Nervosa • Obesity also has disordered eating patterns, but at this moment it is not considered an eating disorder
Eating Disorders:Bulimia & Anorexia Nervosa • Adolescents with these eating disorders have an extremely distorted body image • The definitions below are provided by the book, but I do not agree…I am providing them as a point of reference: • Bulimia • Eating binges; force themselves to vomit to avoid weight gain • 3% of adolescents are genuine bulimics • Anorexia • Starve themselves to keep weight down • Fewer than one-half of 1% of adolescents • Bulimia and Anorexia 10 times more common among females
Anorexia Nervosa • Name originated from the idea that there was a “lack of appetite induced by nervousness” • Characterized by: • Intense fear of weight gain • Refusal to maintain healthy body weight • Women: • At this time, this diagnosis requires that a woman does not have their period. However, there is much controversy associated with this. • Men: • Decrease in sexual appetite and testosterone • Patients may deny having a problem • May be quietly proud of their achieved thinness • May be life persistent • Mortality rate is 12 times higher than regular population • Death is usually due to physiological consequences (i.e. brain atrophy, etc. ) or suicide
Types of Anorexia Nervosa • Restricting Type: • Limit food and caloric intake • Avoid eating in front of others • When eating with others they may eat slowly or dispose of food • Admired by others with eating disorders • Binge Eating/Purging Type: • Either binge, purge, or binge and purge • Binge: out of control eating of amounts of food that are far greater than what a normal person would eat • May be followed by purging • Purging: Self induced vomiting, misuse of laxatives, diuretics, enemas, etc • This doesn’t stop caloric intake • Approximately 30% to 50% go from Restricting to Binge Eating Purging
Bulimia Nervosa • Characterized by: • Binge eating and efforts to prevent weight gain by using unhealthy behaviors such as self induced vomiting, laxatives, exercise, etc. • Person is not severely underweight. Typically, they are normal weight. • Usually begins by restricting eating to lose weight. Then the person eats “forbidden food”. • Binge: may be equal to about 4,800 calories • May feel disgusted, but continue due to fear of weight gain • Feel shame and guilt
Types of Bulimia Nervosa • Purging: • Vomiting, laxatives, diuretics • Most common (make up 80% of those diagnosed with Bulimia Nervosa). • Non Purging: • Exercise
Risk Factors for Eating Disorders • Eating Disorders are believed to be caused by an interaction of biological, socio cultural, family, and individual variables.
Treatment for Anorexia Nervosa • Medications: • No strong evidence that medication is helpful • Antidepressants and antipsychotic medications are sometimes used to help with disturbed thinking • Family Therapy: • Treatment of choice for adolescents • Therapist works with parents to get child to begin to eat again • After weight gain, other family problems are discussed • Randomized controlled trials show that patients who receive family therapy do better than the control group and five years after treatment 75 to 90 percent are fully recovered • Cognitive Behavioral Therapy: • Changing behavior and maladaptive ways of thinking • Treatment will usually last for one to two years • Modifying distorted beliefs about food, weight, and the self which have led to the disorder • Recovery rate of about 17%
Treatment for Bulimia Nervosa • Medication: • Antidepressants are commonly used • co-morbidity with mood disorders may be a factor • Seem to decrease binges and improve patient’s mood and preoccupation with shape and weight • Cognitive Behavioral Therapy: • Treatment of choice • Shown to be superior to medication and interpersonal therapy • Combining CBT with medication only slightly increases the results • Used to normalize eating patterns • Meal planning, nutritional education, and ending binging and purging cycles by teaching the person to eat small amounts of food throughout the day • Changing cognitions and behaviors that initiate binge cycle through challenging dysfunctional thought patterns such as: • All or nothing thinking • Idea of good food versus bad food
Treatment Outcomes • Eating Disorders are difficult to treat & have high relapse rates • Anorexia Nervosa: • Study conducted by Lowe two years after treatment: • 16% no longer alive (mostly due to complications of starvation or suicide) • 10% had not recovered • 21% partially recovered • 51% completely recovered • Bulimia Nervosa: • Study conducted 11 years after treatment: • 0.5% mortality rate • 70% recovered • 30% still had it • It is important to note that the client may recover, but may still have food issues.
Physical Health and Health Care in Adolescence • Adolescent health care needs differ from those of children and adults • Health compromising and health enhancing behaviors • School-based health centers • 10% are family planning visits • Most visits involve injuries, acute illnesses and mental health Insert photo from DAL
Physical Health and Health Care in Adolescence • PARADOX: Adolescence is a healthy period of the lifespan • But nearly 1 in 15 adolescents experiences at least one disabling chronic illness: • mental disorders (depression) • respiratory illnesses (asthma) • muscular and skeletal disorders (arthritis) • Threats to health have psychosocial causes (not natural causes)
Adolescent Mortality • Today • 45% of teen deaths due to car accidents and other unintentional injuries • 30% of teen deaths due to homicide and suicide • 50 Years Ago • Most deaths from illness and disease