Girl, 3, starts growing breasts after being exposed to ‘transgender’ dad’s hormone gel

A three-year-old girl suffered from early-onset puberty and began growing breasts after being exposed to a hormone gel used by her “transgender” father.

The 2023 case was revealed in a report by Danish researchers published by the European Society for Paediatric Endocrinology which detailed the girl’s symptoms and concluded that gender-deluded parents should be informed of the risks of hormones applied to the skin.

According to the case report, which described the father’s estradiol gel as “gender affirming hormone therapy”, the girl was referred to the paediatric clinic at the Aalborg University Hospital in Denmark with breast development and vaginal discharge over a period of six months.

Her father had first been prescribed a spray containing 6.12mg of the estrogen steroid hormone estradiol, but was then given a estradiol gel for seven months which he applied manually to his chest, abdomen, shoulders and thighs daily.

The father reported skin-to-skin contact with his daughter on a daily basis, and a physical examination of the girl revealed breast growth, above average height and weight and bone age advanced to 6.9 years.

A pelvic ultrasound also revealed development of the girl’s uterus and endometrium consistent with mid-to-late stage puberty.

“These clinical, radiologic and laboratory findings were consistent with a diagnosis of peripheral precocious puberty due to exogenous estradiol,” the authors wrote.

“The hormone therapy of the father was changed from a gel to a transdermal patch, and the girl experienced regression of breast development, normalisation of growth velocity, pelvic ultrasound and GnRH stimulation test.”

The case report did not include information on the father other than that he was taking the estradiol gel and claimed to be “transgender”.

The authors concluded that the case showed exposure to female hormones applied to the skin can lead to precocious puberty in prepubertal girls, and that patients undergoing so-called gender-affirming treatment should be warned.

“Transgender persons should be thoroughly informed of the risk of transmission of transdermal hormones and be advised to wash hands, use gloves and avoid skin contact shortly after hormone application,” the authors wrote.

“Patients with children must be warned of the risk and Gender Clinics should consider the possibility of prescribing alternative routes of administration such as tablets or patches in high-risk patients.”

Header image: A homosexual and “transgender flag” (US Gov – public domain).

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