Abstract

In biometric studies of rats, it is desirable at times to compare simultaneously and graphically (1) Various organs by weight with (2) age and (3) body weight of the animal. By ordinary two dimension graphs, relationships between any 2 of these data can be well illustrated, but only by “three dimension” graphs is it possible to illustrate simultaneously the interrelationship of all 3–age, body-weight and weight of any given organ. The construction of such graphs is simple (Chart 1) : Ordinate AB forms with abscissae BC and BD an angle of 120°. AB represents age, the only constant uniform with all rats; BC body-weight and BD gland-weight. The “age-weight” is easily plotted, the line B1C1 paralleling BC and forming an angle of 120° (AB1C1). Gland-weight is plotted from B1 (corresponding to age) on line AB to D1 (representing gland-weight), which point must be on a line perpendicular to AB projected from C1 (corresponding to body-weight). For normal rats all lines representing “age-body-weight” (B1C1) will parallel abscissa BC and form angles of 120° with ordinate AB, differing only in length. The lines representing “age-gland-weight” (B1D1) will vary in length and will parallel BD only when the increase in weight of the gland, with respect to age is directly proportional to the increase in body weight. If the gland is small for the age, angle D2B1A will be greater than 120° and line D2B1 short. If the gland is large, then line D3B1 will be longer and angle D3B1A more acute.

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