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Expert pediatricians from hospitals in Wuhan held a consultation Wednesday on 3 infant girls who grow breasts after drinking Synutra milk powder, the Southern Metropolis Daily reported. The infants underwent blood hormone and bone-age tests again. After a 6-hour consultation, the experts concluded the symptoms are just early development of breasts rather than real premature puberty. The experts said the infants need to do many tests later, including blood and nuclear magnetic resonance tests. They can only be diagnosed as premature puberty when they reach 8 and grow faster than their peers. |
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