Types of growth data
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Growth is in general a regular process. Contrary to what is said in some of the older textbooks, growth in height does not proceed by fits and starts, nor does growth in upward dimensions alternate with growth in transverse ones. The more carefully measurements are taken, with precautions, for example, to minimize the decrease in height that occurs during the day for postural reasons, the more regular does the succession of points in a graph of growth become. Many attempts have been made at finding mathematical curves that fit, and thus summarize, human growth data. What is needed is a curve or curves with relatively few constants, each capable of being interpreted in a biologically meaningful way. Yet the fit to empirical data must be adequate within the limits of measuring error. The problem is difficult, partly because the measurements usually taken are themselves biologically complex. Stature, for example, consists of leg length and trunk length and head height, all of which have rather different growth curves. Even with relatively homogeneous dimensions such as the length of the radius bone in the forearm, or width of an arm muscle, it is not clear what purely biological assumptions should be made as the basis for the form of the curve. The assumption that cells are continuously dividing leads to a different formulation from the assumption that cells are adding constant amounts of nondividing material or amounts of nondividing material at rates varying from one age period to another.
Fitting a curve to the individual values, however, is the only way of extracting the maximum information from an individual’s measurement data. More than one curve is needed to fit the postnatal age range. It seems that two curves may suffice, at least for many measurements such as height and weight—one curve for the period from a few months after birth to the beginning of adolescence and a different type of curve for the adolescent spurt.
Such curves have to be fitted to data on single individuals. Yearly averages derived from different children each measured only once do not, in general, give the same curve. Thus the distinction between the two sorts of investigation is important. When the same child at each age is used, the study is called longitudinal; when different children at each age are used, it is called cross-sectional. In a cross-sectional study all of the children at age eight, for example, are different from those at age seven. A study may be longitudinal over any number of years; there are short-term longitudinal studies extending from age four to six, for instance, and full birth-to-maturity longitudinal studies in which the children may be examined once, twice, or more times every year from birth until 20 or over. Mixed longitudinal studies are those in which children join and leave the group studied at varying intervals. Both cross-sectional and longitudinal studies have their uses, but they do not give the same information, and the same statistical methods cannot be used for the two types of study. Cross-sectional surveys are obviously cheaper and more quickly done and can include much larger numbers of children. Periodic cross-sectional surveys are valuable in assessing the nutritional progress of a country or a socioeconomic group and the health of the child population as a whole. But they never reveal individual differences in rate of growth or in the timing of particular phases such as the adolescent growth spurt. It is these individual rate differences that throw light on the genetic control of growth and on the correlation of growth with psychological development, educational achievement, and social behaviour.
Longitudinal studies are laborious and time-consuming; they demand great perseverance on the part of those who make them and those who take part in them; and they demand high technical standards, since in the calculation of a growth increment from one occasion to the next opportunities for two errors of measurement occur. In spite of these problems, longitudinal studies are the indispensable base on which the diagnosis and treatment of disorders of growth rest, for the clinical approach is a longitudinal one; and each child treated with human growth hormone, or with other hormones that affect growth, represents an attempt to alter an individual pattern of growth velocity.
Averages simply computed from cross-sectional data inevitably produce velocity curves that are flatter and broader than the curve for an individual and hence not a proper basis for clinical standards. It is possible to construct curves, however, whose 50th percentile (or average) represents the actual growth of a typical individual, by taking the shape of the curve from individual longitudinal data and the absolute values for the beginning and end from large cross-sectional surveys. Graphs were plotted showing height-attained and height-velocity curves for the “typical” boy and girl in Britain in 1965, determined in this way. By “typical” is meant that boy or girl who has the mean (average) birth length, grows always at the mean velocity, has the peak of the adolescent growth spurt at the mean age, and finally reaches the mean adult height at the mean age of cessation of growth. Practically no individual follows the 50th percentile curve, but most have curves of the same shape. Standards for height for clinical use are constructed around these curves.