He Started Puberty When He Was 2 Years Old. Now, He's Sharing His Experience (2024)

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  • Jeremy Hobson
He Started Puberty When He Was 2 Years Old. Now, He's Sharing His Experience (1)

Editor's Note: This segment was rebroadcast on Nov. 28, 2019.That audio is availablehere.

One thing all humans have in common is that at a certain point in our childhood, we go through puberty: we get bigger, our bodies change, we often get a little rambunctious and moody, and we mature sexually.

But imagine if those changes occurred not when you were 11 or 13 or 15 years old, but when you were a toddler. That was the experience of Patrick Burleigh, who has a rare genetic mutation that triggers testosterone production far younger than normal.

Doctors call it precocious puberty.

"It's extremely rare — it's estimated that there might be like fewer than 1,000 of us," says Burleigh, whowrote about his experience in New York magazine. "And basically it's a mutation of the luteinizing hormone chorionic gonadotropin receptor gene, which is responsible for triggering testosterone production in the testicl*s."

Burleigh tells Here & Now's Jeremy Hobson his family was anticipating his symptoms of early puberty because his father, grandfather and great-grandfather all went through it, too. One of the earliest was Burleigh getting his first pubic hair when he was just 2 years old.

"I was bigger — considerably bigger — than a 2-year-old, and also [had] impulsive behavior that's characteristic of someone going through puberty," he says. "Like just, you know, an inability to control my impulses, aggressive outbursts, hitting other kids, tantrums that were kind of truly epic — just behavior that was extreme."

Interview Highlights

On being twice the size of other kids growing up

"I was huge. ... I was treated for the mutation at the National Institutes of Health in Maryland, and my first visit, I was about 3 years old and I weighed as much and was as tall as a 7-year-old, and had the testosterone levels of a 14-year-old — kind of deep in the throes of puberty. So I was huge and I was not just bigger, but also, I had all this testosterone coursing through my body, so I was muscular, and when I was 3 and 4 years old I was kind of, basically until I was about 7, sort of an athletic phenom. I was hitting home runs and ... everyone wanted me on their team because I was just much bigger and stronger."

On how aware he was of what was going on

"I knew I was different, obviously, and I knew that ... I was taking a lot of medication to suppress the production of testosterone. So I knew that there was something sort of wrong with me biologically. But beyond that, I didn't know much. And I also ... I have no memory of a time before all of this, you know? So there was no moment when it kind of changed for me physically, which is normally what happens when you're, you know, a conscious 13-year-old and your body starts to change."

On whether he grew up feeling like there was something wrong with him

"Yeah, yes. Because it was so behavioral, and because I was ... beginning at about 4 and 5, I started to get in trouble in school a lot, because I just wasn't able to control my impulses, and I looked so dramatically different from everyone else that sort of normal misbehavior was amplified, in my case. If there were a group of us and we were all doing something wrong on the playground, I stuck out and would kind of take the blame. And so, sort of being bad and looking different and feeling different was all sort of packaged up together.

"I started to lie about my age when I was probably about 8. It was easy to do this, because I looked so much older and it was also, in a way, it was easier for me to not have to explain why I looked so much older.... So I would just tell people ... when I was 8, I would tell them I was 12 or 13, and so I started to hang out with older kids and kids who were doing things that were kind of beyond my peers, and that meant sexual stuff, and it also meant smoking cigarettes and experimenting with substances — kind of all the other rebellious behavior that's normally associated with teenagers I started to do when I was considerably younger."

"I would just tell people ... when I was 8, I would tell them I was 12 or 13, and so I started to hang out with older kids and kids who were doing things that were kind of beyond my peers."

Patrick Burleigh

On his peers eventually catching up with him, and whether symptoms last beyond puberty

"About 14 or 15, everyone else caught up and I also finished, and kind of the convergence of those two really ... it was almost overnight. All of a sudden I kind of looked around and I no longer stuck out. I was no longer this outcast. And also just hormonally, I was all of a sudden kind of more subdued.

"The one kind of lingering [symptom] is that men who have this, they don't grow to their full stature, what they call target height. Most men who have had familial male-limited precocious puberty end up only being around 5 feet tall. I ended up being 6 feet tall, and I think that's a combination of the medication that I took in all my treatment, as well as just having tall genes — like my brother's 6'6" and he didn't inherit a mutation. So I think I was lucky in that way. But other than that, no, it's purely developmental — once puberty is done with you, it's done. It goes away."

On growing out of precocious puberty, and how going through it shaped him as a teenager and beyond

"I still kind of feel different, honestly, even though if you met me, you wouldn't think of me as different. But I think, those feelings of being other and not fitting in, as well as sort of being labeled 'bad,' from an early age, they stayed with me, even though by the time I was 15 or 16, I had sort of made a 180-degree turn in my life. I was no longer getting in trouble and I did well in school, and I was a decent athlete. I think that I did, once I began to fit in, I did feel relief, and at the same time a desire to — not unlike my father — kind of hide my past and hide the challenges, and what I felt for a long time was kind of a deviant past."

On his great-grandfather, who because of the mutation was able to lie about his age and become the youngest American to serve in World War I

"He ran away from home at age 10, and, kind of taken with patriotic fervor, he joined. He was shipped off to war and was, like, fighting in the trenches, fighting on the front lines by the time he was 11 and 12 years old. They didn't discover his his real age. He told them that he was 20 years old, and he looked convincingly 20 years old at the time.

"He got drunk with some fellow soldiers and they took a cargo plane up — they essentially hijacked it and were kind of joy riding. And when it was grounded, he got in trouble, and as punishment they sent him once more to the front, and he suffered mustard gas poisoning and was hospitalized, and only then did the U.S. government discover that he was actually only 13 at the time, and they sent him home. He had a momentary flash of celebrity when the newspapers caught wind of the story and they dubbed him 'the youngest Yank.' "

"Selecting out for that mutation, eliminating it from my lineage, in a way it felt like eliminating this essential part of myself. And that was a feeling that ... surprised me. But it was present."

Patrick Burleigh, on confronting the potential for his own child to go through precocious puberty

On his thought process when he and his wife were thinking about having kids of their own

"I didn't know, when we were going through the process of thinking about having a child, I didn't know that it would be possible to test for this. It didn't occur to me. My wife and I ended up doing in vitro fertilization, and we ended up with fertilized embryos, and my wife happens to be an endocrinologist, and so we found out that we could test the embryos for the LHCGR mutation. And so ... I was faced suddenly with this decision, whether or not to select out for this mutation.

"It feels like an obvious decision, right? Like, why would I ever wish the challenges that I endured on my own child? But it ended up being a lot more complex than that, because this mutation — for all of those struggles — it ... has defined me. Certainly it defined my childhood, and had a profound and lasting kind of impact on how I think about myself and probably the path that I've taken. The same is true for my father and my grandfather and great-grandfather. And so selecting out for that mutation, eliminating it from my lineage, in a way it felt like eliminating this essential part of myself. And that was a feeling that ... surprised me. But it was present."

On whether Burleigh's father encouraged him to select out for the precocious puberty mutation or not

"He didn't, he didn't, which kind of shocked me, because having precocious puberty had been so traumatic for him that it's not even something that he really wants to talk about with me. So I was surprised that he encouraged me not to do it. I mean he would have supported me either way, but I think that he felt the same way that I did, which is that it was very hard. But it's sort of that cliché, like, 'what doesn't kill you makes you stronger.'

"It led to this conversation which I write about in the article, one of the first and only kind of conversations that we've ever had about our shared experiences having precocious puberty, in which he said to me, 'Your son, if he inherits this disease, with you as his father he'll be fine, and I have confidence in you as a parent.' My wife and I, we talked about it a lot, and sort of investigated all of our options and in the end we felt like we were capable of dealing with it, and also that the treatment had sort of progressed far enough that our son, were he to inherit it, would be all right.

"It was definitely ... it was moving to hear that from my father. Especially because I still — and I think, if I can speak for him, he does as well — I still carry around this feeling of being a mutant, in a way, like there's something wrong with me. So those words are meaningful."

On whether the genetic mutation was passed on to his two children

"We rolled the dice with our son, and luckily he didn't inherit the mutation. And our daughter, who's 1 1/2, we haven't tested her, because the mutation doesn't manifest in women because you have to have testicl*s. So we'll either get her tested later, or she'll test herself before she has her own children."

On when he thinks he'll tell his son about his experience

"That's a good question. I don't know. I think maybe in a few years, he'll be 4 soon. It's a pretty complex concept, but you know, probably in the next few years, I think."

Julia Corcoran produced this interview and edited it for broadcast with Todd Mundt. Jack Mitchell adapted it for the web.

This segment aired on January 29, 2019.

He Started Puberty When He Was 2 Years Old. Now, He's Sharing His Experience (2024)

FAQs

Can a 2 year old go through puberty? ›

Some very young girls (usually from 6 months to 3 years old) may show breast development that later disappears or may last but without other physical changes of puberty. This is called premature thelarche (thee-LAR-kee) and usually doesn't cause lasting problems.

What is the youngest age a boy can start puberty? ›

But it's perfectly normal for puberty to begin at any point between the ages of 8 and 13 in girls and 9 and 14 in boys. There's not usually any need to worry if puberty does not start around the average age, but it's a good idea to speak to your GP for advice if it starts before 8 or has not started by around 14.

What is precocious puberty in boys? ›

Early puberty is when your son starts showing the first signs of puberty before he is 9 years old. This can be normal, but might require evaluation by a pediatric endocrinologist (hormone doctor).

What triggers puberty in males? ›

Hormones from the brain trigger the start of puberty. Hormones are chemical messengers that tell the body what to do. In males: The hormones tell the testicl*s to make the hormone testosterone and sperm. In females: The hormones tell the ovaries to make the hormone estrogen and triggers the growth and release of eggs.

Can precocious puberty cause problems later in life? ›

Recent studies have found an increase of social anxiety, depressive and externalizing symptoms, and risk of psychopathology, in association with physical changes secondary to early pubertal maturation, mainly in females (93-99).

Is early puberty bad for boys? ›

Children who hit puberty before their peers are more likely to have mental health problems, research finds. Enhancing their coping skills may help.

What age is too early for puberty? ›

Male puberty usually begins at about age 12. Female puberty is at about age 10. Sometimes, though, puberty can start earlier and before signs show. When male puberty starts before age 9 and female puberty before age 8, it is called precocious (pre KOH shuss) or early puberty.

At what age do girls get pubic hair? ›

Between ages 8 and 13, girls typically experience the following: Their breasts begin to bud, and their areola (the pigmented area around the nipple) starts to enlarge. They develop a small amount of genital hair. At this stage, they experience a growth spurt of about 2 3/4 inches per year.

Is it normal for a 4 year old to have pubic hair? ›

Premature pubarche, or the development of pubic hair before the age of 8 in girls or 9 in boys, is most commonly caused by premature adrenarche. Adrenarche is the maturation of the adrenal zona reticularis in both boys and girls, resulting in the development of pubic hair, axillary hair, and adult apocrine body odor.

Is precocious puberty serious? ›

With central precocious puberty, puberty starts too soon but develops as usual. For most children with this condition, there's no medical problem or other known reason for the early puberty. In rare cases, the following can cause central precocious puberty: A tumor in the brain or spinal cord.

Can precocious puberty be treated? ›

Treating central precocious puberty

When treating children with central precocious puberty, we often use synthetic luteinizing-hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH). This hormone appears to stop sexual maturation brought on by the disorder by stopping the pituitary gland from releasing gonadotropin.

How rare is precocious puberty? ›

Precocious puberty is rare, meaning it affects about 1% or less of the U.S. population. Many more girls are affected than boys. One study suggests that African American girls have some early breast development or some early pubic hair more often than white girls or Hispanic girls.

Does precocious puberty affect height? ›

Central precocious puberty (CPP) is due to premature activation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis. It predominantly affects girls. CPP leads to lower final height (FH), yet the treatment benefit in girls between 6 and 8 years is equivocal.

How do you treat precocious puberty in boys? ›

This usually involves medicine called GnRH analogue therapy, which delays further development. It may be a monthly shot with medicine such as leuprolide acetate (Lupron Depot), or triptorelin (Trelstar, Triptodur Kit). Or some newer formulations can be given at longer intervals.

Is my 2 year old going through a growth spurt? ›

The Bottom Line

In fact, after your little one's first year, the only official growth spurt is puberty, which won't happen for many years. Instead, toddlers tend to experience small bursts and spurts of growth interspersed with times of more gradual development, but no major growth spurts.

Is it normal for a 2 year old to have pubic hair? ›

Premature adrenarche appears more frequently in girls2 and most commonly occurs between the ages of 6 and 8 years. In contrast, children who present with isolated pubic hair during the first 12 months of life are thought to be rare. Furthermore, pubic hair of infancy has not been well-described in the literature.

Why is my toddler hitting age 2? ›

It is very typical for a child who is 2 or 3 years old to start hitting or biting to express frustration or to get something they want. Toddlers have more motor control than infants, but don't yet have a lot of language to communicate what they need or want. Frustration is normal and to be expected.

Is it normal for a 2 year old girl to have pubic hair? ›

From our experience and review of the literature, we suggest that isolated pubic hair of infancy is a benign entity. However, long-term follow-up needs to be done to determine if pubic hair of infancy is an atypical variant of premature adrenarche, which may place these patients at risk for later adult disease.

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