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Puberty refers to the process of physical changes by which a child's body becomes an adult body capable of reproduction. Growth accelerates in the first half of puberty and reaches completion by the end. Body differences between boys and girls before puberty are almost entirely restricted to the genitalia. During puberty, major differences of size, shape, composition, and function develop in many body structures and systems. The most obvious of these are referred to as secondary sexual characteristics. In a strict sense, the term puberty (and this article) refer to the bodily changes of sexual maturation rather than the psychosocial and cultural aspects of adolescent development. Adolescence is the period of psychological and social transition between childhood and adulthood. Adolescence largely overlaps the period of puberty but its boundaries are less precisely defined and it refers as much to the psychosocial and cultural characteristics of development during the teen years as to the physical changes of puberty.

1 Puberty as a physical process

1.1 Physical changes of puberty in girls

1.1.1 Breast development

The first physical sign of puberty in girls is usually a firm, tender lump under the center of the areola(e) of one or both breasts, occurring on average at about 10.5 years. This referred to as thelarche. By the widely used Tanner staging of puberty, this is stage 2 of breast development (stage 1 is a flat, prepubertal breast). Within a 6-12 months, the swelling has clearly begun in both sides, softened, and can be felt and seen extending beyond the edges of the areolae. This is stage 3 of breast development. By another 12 months (stage 4), the breasts are approaching mature size and shape, with areolae and papilla e forming a secondary mound. In most young women, this mound disappears into the contour of the mature breast (stage 5), although there is so much variation in sizes and shapes of adult breasts that distinguishing advanced stages is of little clinical value.

1.1.2 Pubic hair in girls

Pubic hair is often the second unequivocal change of puberty. It is referred to as pubarche and the pubic hairs are usually visible first along the labia. The first few hairs are described as Tanner stage 2. Stage 3 is usually reached within another 6–12 months, when the hairs are too numerous to count and appear on the monsIn human anatomy, the mons veneris (latin, mound of Venus , is the soft mound of flesh just over the vulva in females (more generally in mammals it is called the mons pubis , raised above the surrounding area due to a pad of fat lying just beneath it. as well. By stage 4, the pubic hairs densely fill the "pubic triangle." Stage 5 refers to spread of pubic hair to the thighIn humans the thigh is the area between the pelvis and buttocks and the knee. Anatomically, it is part of the lower limb. There is one bone in the thigh called the femur. This bone is very thick and strong, and forms a ball and socket joint at the hip, ans and sometimes upward towards the umbilicusFor the plant of this name, see Umbilicus rupestris. The umbilicus also called the navel is essentially a scar representing the former attachment of the umbilical cord in the fetus. Colloquial terms for navel are belly button and tummy button. It can form. In about 15% of girls, the earliest pubic hair appears before breast development begins.

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