Premature adrenarche is a condition in which a child develops early signs of puberty-related changes—such as body odor, pubic or underarm hair, or mild acne—earlier than expected (before age 8 in girls and 9 in boys). It happens because the adrenal glands start producing androgens (especially DHEA and DHEA-S) earlier than normal, not because the brain has triggered true puberty. Importantly, there is no breast development in girls or testicular enlargement in boys, which distinguishes it from true precocious puberty.
Premature adrenarche simply merges into normal puberty during the teenage years and becomes clinically insignificant. It usually does not trigger early true puberty, affect final adult height, or require treatment; doctors mainly observe to ensure development stays on a normal trajectory. The majority experience no lasting problems as typical puberty progresses.
Doctors do not see this as a disorder or a disease that requires any intervention, and therefore Rife Frequencies were never developed or required for this condition.