Abstract
Summary 1.Infants with acute intestinal intoxication are, on the average, shorter than healthy infants from the same social environment. 2.In relation to total body length, infants with acute intestinal intoxication have narrower faces, narrower shoulders and smaller chests than healthy infants. 3.The proportion of the dimensions mentioned above to total body length in infants with acute intestinal intoxication is determined, in part, by a retardation of growth. 4.Since deficient diet leads to retardation of growth, it is reasonable to look upon acute intestinal intoxication as causally related to dietary deficiency. Summary 1.Infants with acute intestinal intoxication are, on the average, shorter than healthy infants from the same social environment. 2.In relation to total body length, infants with acute intestinal intoxication have narrower faces, narrower shoulders and smaller chests than healthy infants. 3.The proportion of the dimensions mentioned above to total body length in infants with acute intestinal intoxication is determined, in part, by a retardation of growth. 4.Since deficient diet leads to retardation of growth, it is reasonable to look upon acute intestinal intoxication as causally related to dietary deficiency.
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