21
Table 13

Comparison of Anthropometric Data (1959) on Children With Retarded
Osseous Development With Those of Their Next Younger Sibs

.
Subject
No.

Age in
1959, yr

Weight,
Ib

Stature,
cm

5
85

6%2(2)*
4%2(1)

36
33

(2)
(1)

98.8(1)
1009(2)

54.6(1)
56.0(2)

2
91

6%2(2)
4%2(1)

41.5(2)
34.51)

108.3(2)
97.11)

60.3 (2)
556.3 (1)

4%2(1)

38.3(1)

104.7(2)

3

83

65

69%2(2)

39.5(2)

1022(1)

Situng
Head
height, cm circumference,cm

Biacromial
width,cm

Bi-iliae
width,cm

Calf
circumference, cm

48.3 (2)
46.0 (1)

21.6 (1)
22.0 (2)

17.0 (1)
17.8 (2)

22.0 (2)
20.8 (1)

52.7 (2)
49.5 (1)

22.8 (2)
21.6 (1)

18.0 (2)
16.8 (1)

22.6 (2)
21.4 (1)

22.3 (-)

17.0 (2)

23.6 (2)

57.4 (1)

49.3 (1)

22.3(-)

59.5 (2)

50.0 (2)

169(1)

22.6 (1)

86

4¥2(1)

6%2(2)

33.0(2)

984(2)
97.0(1)

54.5(1)

55.8(2)

47.2 (1)

20.8(1)
22.0 (2)

16.6 (1)

—-17.5(2)

20.1 (-)

6
84

6%2(2)
4%2(1)

41.0(2)
35.5¢(1)

106.3(2)
98.6(1)

59.3(2)
55.0(1)

49.3 (2)
48.3 (1)

23.0 (2)
21.6 (1)

17.0 (2)
16.5 (1)

22.4 (2)
21.3 (1)

29.8(1)

48.4 (2)

20.1 (-}

* Numbers in parentheses refer to ranking of each item, (1) indicating the younger child or the smaller measurement
of the pair and (2) the older child or the larger value.

sure to radiation. One boy ( #6) showed lessretardation. One boy and onegirl, also about the
Same age, were exposed to radiation butdid not
showany retardation in bone development.
The height and weight of the one exposed girl
with retarded osseous maturation were considerably belowthose of chronological age peers (Table
11). However, measurements on the one exposed
girl with normal bone development ( #33) were not inferior to those of control chronological age
peers. She wasslightly smaller than her control
skeletal age peers. For the boys, unfortunately,
there were insufficient control chronological age
peers for calculation of means. Comparison with
skelatal age peers indicated that two of the boys
with skeletal retardation were taller and one

shorter than the controls (Table 11).
Comparison of the physicalsizes of the children
with retarded skeleta} maturation with the physical sizes of their sibs brought out another significant finding. Three (subjects +3, 5, and 65) of the
five children with skeletal age retardation were

shorter in stature in 1960 than their next vounger

sibs (Table 12; see also Figure 11). Increment data

indicated that these three children failed to show
satisfactory statural gain during the past two

years, even though in 1958, at the age of =5'%

years, all three had been taller than their younger

Figure 11. Brothers. Left, #5, age 6;

sibs. The difference in age between sib pairs

right, =85, age 4 (1960).

ST TT a A TI

we

re ee es ee ee

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