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A prior question is almost the same as yours. Your situation is basically the same.
In regards to your final height, there are many factors which formulas cannot cover. They cover most situations and the claim of accuracy to within an inch is usually to a certain percentile. For example, they may be accurate to within a inch in 90% of the girls surveyed. That would mean they are wrong 10% of the time.
Poor nutrition or disease can throw these estimates off. Most estimators are calibrated to girls in the United States which has a different nutritional standard than many countries. And then there is always the luck of the gene draw, you could have received genes that limits your maximum height.
While most girls do not grow more than two inches after their first menstruation, it doesn't mean every girl is so limited. The key is that most girls have their major growth spurt about six months before their first menstruation. But not every girl develops in the same order. I recall that my own sister had her first menstruation before her growth spurt. Such can happen with some girls.



