It is generally assumed that adult height is attained when the skeletal
age is 17 to 18. years in girls and 18 to 19 in boys (50,52,248), but actual
measurements on the Marshallese population showed that many subjects continued
to increase in stature with advancing chronological age, even after age 30, although the late increments were almost always very small.
After the
Marshallese reached age 16, absences from the island at the time of survey
became more

frequent;

therefore,

the

time when

adult

stature was

actually

attained is uncertain for many individuals.

Statistical analyses (Appendix III) of the data on adult (final) stature

of the Rongelap inhabitants who were in the pediatric age group on March 1,
1954, gave the following results:
*
In the unexposed group, for both boys and girls, there was no signifi-

cant difference in mean adult stature between those born after 1944 (<10 years
old on March 1, 1954) and those born before 1945 (>10 years old on March l,
1954).

*

In the exposed group,

cant difference in mean adult
born before 1945.

for both boys and girls,
stature

between

those

there was no signifi-

born after

1944 and

those

*
For both boys and girls, there was no significant difference in mean
adult stature between those who were exposed on Rongelap and Ailingnae to fallout radiation and those who were not.
Since osseous maturation is dependent on normal thyroid function, it is
reasonable to assume that its retardation in exposed children was due to radiation damage to the thyroid glands.
The marked retardation of skeletal matura-

tion followed by dramatic improvement after the administration of thyroid hormone has been documented in the children who were clinically hypothyroid (13).
The catch-up phenomenon in respect to osseous maturation can reasonably be
attributed to the administration of thyroid hormone to the exposed popula-

tions, many of whom were subclinically hypothyroid (see Section 1X.C.2).

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