Previous research shows that early puberty increases the risk of diseases in adulthood, for example, testicular cancer in men and breast cancer in women.
Early puberty also can stunt growth and cause behavioural problems.
The class of pesticides studied, pyrethroids, accounts for more than 30 per cent of global insecticide use, said Jing Liu, an associate professor at Zhejiang University in China.
These chemicals are known endocrine-disrupting chemicals that interfere with the body's hormones.
Today, a boy's body matures into an adult's between the ages of 9 and 14 years on average, researchers said.
Experts believe that many factors, including environmental toxins, are responsible for the decreasing age at onset of puberty for both boys and girls.
Pyrethroids are used indoors and outdoors to kill mosquitoes and other insects, and are sprayed on crops.
Humans likely receive most of their exposure to pyrethroids from food and residential use.
Evidence of recent exposure to the chemical appears in human urine as a metabolite, or molecule, called 3-phenoxybenzoic acid (3-PBA).
Both these hormones spur production of testosterone in males.
Having an increased urinary level of 3-PBA raised the odds of a boy being at an advanced stage of genital development by 73 to 110 per cent, Liu reported.
Since, it is difficult to test the cause of environmental risk factors in humans, the researchers sought to identify in animals how pyrethroids alter the timing of puberty.
They demonstrated that cypermethrin had a direct effect by inducing testosterone formation and interfering with intracellular processes that are critical to male sexual development, Liu said.
"Given the growing use of pyrethroid insecticides, we must prudently assess these chemicals for their risks to children's health," he said.
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