Abstract

This study encompassed a cross-sectional and longitudinal examination of schoolchildren as they entered into and passed through puberty, examining interrelationships between lipids, lipoproteins, and sexual maturation. In the first year of the study (1976), 529 schoolchildren in grades 5–12 participated; 203 were restudied in 1977, and 141 in 1978. At each yearly visit, the children's stage of sexual maturation was assessed using the Tanner scale. Plasma cholesterol and triglyceride were quantitated each year; high, low, and very low density lipoprotein cholesterol (C-HDL, C-LDL, C-VLDL) levels were measured in the second and third years of the study. In males, cross-sectional decrements in plasma cholesterol were observed with increasing sexual maturation (Tanner stages 1–4), with an increment at Tanner 5 (sexual maturity); plasma triglyceride levels rose at all stages save Tanner 4. The mid-Tanner fall in plasma cholesterol appears (longitudinally) to be accounted for by reduction in C-HDL, while the rise in plasma cholesterol at Tanner 5 may be produced by an increase in C-LDL. Changes in age and Quetelet indices did not appear to relate closely to changes in C-VLDL in 12- and 13-yr-old males, but increasing age and Quetelet indices in 14–15-yr old males accompanied increasing C-VLDL. Cross-sectional studies in females revealed that plasma cholesterol fell at Tanner stages 3 and 4 and rose at stage 5; plasma triglyceride rose during all stages except Tanner 4. Longitudinal studies suggested that the decrements in plasma cholesterol in females may be partially accounted for by reductions in C-HDL; the increase in plasma cholesterol in late sexual development may be accounted for by an increase in C-LDL. In male children, we speculate that the fall in C-HDL and late rise in C-LDL as sexual maturation progresses is associated with increased testosterone production.

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