Diagnosing restricted growth
Restricted growth may be diagnosed before a child is born, soon afterwards, or when growth problems become more obvious as they get older.
Growth hormone deficiency is usually diagnosed using growth hormone stimulation tests.
Medicine is injected into a vein or muscle to cause an increase in growth hormone levels in the blood. A lower than normal level indicates a deficiency in growth hormone.
A brain scan will be needed to look at the pituitary gland (which produces growth hormone) if blood tests show low levels of growth hormone.
If one or both parents have a family history of a condition that causes short stature, their baby can be tested for this during pregnancy (prenatal diagnosis).
Read more about screening tests in pregnancy.