ht_DSC_0098_090619_sshBrooke and sister at 16

Brooke Greenberg is the size of an infant, with the mental capacity of a toddler. She turned 16 in January. “Why doesn’t she age?” Howard Greenberg, 52, asked of his daughter. “Is she the fountain of youth?”

Such questions are why scientists are fascinated by Brooke. Among the many documented instances of children who fail to grow or develop in some way, Brooke’s case may be unique, according to her doctor, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine pediatrician Lawrence Pakula, in Baltimore. “Many of the best-known names in medicine, in their experience … had not seen anyone who matched up to Brooke,” Pakula said. “She is always a surprise.”

Brooke hasn’t aged in the conventional sense. Dr. Richard Walker of the University of South Florida College of Medicine, in Tampa, says Brooke’s body is not developing as a coordinated unit, but as independent parts that are out of sync. She has never been diagnosed with any known genetic syndrome or chromosomal abnormality that would help explain why. In a recent paper for the journal “Mechanisms of Ageing and Development,” Walker and his co-authors, who include Pakula and All Children’s Hospital (St. Petersburg, Fla.) geneticist Maxine Sutcliffe chronicled a baffling range of inconsistencies in Brooke’s aging process. She still has baby teeth at 16, for instance. And her bone age is estimated to be more like 10 years old.

“There’ve been very minimal changes in Brooke’s brain,” Walker said. “Various parts of her body, rather than all being at the same stage, seem to be disconnected.” Brooke’s mother, Melanie Greenberg, 48, sees a different picture. “She loves to shop,” Greenberg said. “Just like a woman.” Brooke rides in a stroller while her mom shops for clothes in the infant sections of department stores near their home in a Baltimore suburb. That Brooke is in her mid-teens is so mind-boggling that if another mother with a toddler asks Greenberg how old Brooke is, she usually doesn’t try to explain.

“My system always has been to turn years into months,” Greenberg said. “So, if someone asked today, I might say, she’s 16 months old.”

Amazing. I wonder what will become of her as her parents pass? Just when you thought science could explain everything, it seems we don’t know much. See photos of her through the years.




  1. Sea Lawyer says:

    Quote from dad:

    “What if Brooke holds the secret to aging? We’d like to find out. We’d like to help people.”

    Seriously, people don’t need to keep living longer. The planet is at 6,766,867,756 people and counting, so please get back to arguing about how to minimize the human effects on climate change.

  2. McCullough says:

    It’s for the wealthy only. After the culling of the herd. Hell, Kissinger stopped aging in the early 70’s.

  3. GigG says:

    “Amazing. I wonder what will become of her as her parents pass?”

    This case is very close to the case of the brother of a good friend of mine. His mother died and he died 3 days later after he went into a nursing home.

  4. sadtruth says:

    simple: she’s a vampire.

  5. User7 says:

    “Amazing. I wonder what will become of her as her parents pass?”

    Perhaps her sister in the picture will take her, but she may have other health problems much like a little person, maybe she will not out live her parents.

    Have her parents been changing diapers for 16 years?

  6. father time says:

    Ha! Dr. Pakula was my doctor 35 years ago!

  7. Ron Larson says:

    Somewhere there is a painting of Dorian Grey getting very old.

  8. t0llyb0ng says:

    The opposite of this phenomenon would be progeria, I take it? Where little kids start looking like old people with big bald heads, get brittle bones, have heart attacks, strokes & die early? Just wondering.

  9. wirelessg says:

    “Amazing. I wonder what will become of her as her parents pass?”

    This is not an insult aimed at McCullough, but this statement indicates a sheltered existence which has never come into contact with the millions of children and adult children that suffer from a wide variety of non-life threatening chronic physical and mental conditions. Please take a trip to a Children’s Hospital or Special Needs School and ask this question of any caregiver parent and you will see grown men cry.

  10. Greg Allen says:

    I once knew a woman who was 19 or 20 (and I just a little older) but she looked about 9 or 10. She was being treated for the disorder, whatever it was, but with no success.

    She was very nice and acted her chronological her age. We went-out a couple of times but it was just too weird for me. I felt sorry about that, even at the time and even now.

  11. Comacho for President says:

    Maybe she is a Pentagon experiment, unknown to her parents.

  12. Zarquod says:

    The caption underneath the picture is misleading. Brooke’s sister Carly is 13 years old, not 16.

  13. john robb says:

    so sad when i read this story tears came to my eyes

  14. evans says:

    well if she living a happy life then that’s all that really matters.

  15. sierra says:

    i wish life wasnt like this for other people that is just sad…. have fun


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