Literature DB >> 187065

Some secular changes in the growth of American-born and native Japanese children.

W W Greulich.   

Abstract

Three hundred and sixteen (35%) of the American-born Japanese children whose height, weight, and skeletal age were recorded in 1956-57 were reexamined as young adults between 1968 and 1974, when they were found to be taller, heavier and shorter legged than men and women in Japan who were born in the same years as they. These differences between the American-born and the native Japanese adults were relatively smaller than they had been during childhood, due to both an acceleration in the growth rate of the native Japanese and a concomitant decline in that of the American-born Japanese during the intervening years. A comparison of our 1956-57 data with Kondo and Eto's findings in Los Angeles in 1971 shows that there has been very little increase in the size of California-Japanese children since 1956. The curves of average heights of native Japanese children 6 to 20 years of age, at 10-year intervals from 1900 to 1970, disclosed the changing rate at which they grew during different decates of that period. Those curves and other data discussed in this paper provide additional evidence of the biological superiority of the human female as compared with the male.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1976        PMID: 187065     DOI: 10.1002/ajpa.1330450320

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Phys Anthropol        ISSN: 0002-9483            Impact factor:   2.868


  6 in total

1.  The treatment of parental height as a biological factor in studies of birth weight and childhood growth.

Authors:  N J Spencer; S Logan
Journal:  Arch Dis Child       Date:  2002-09       Impact factor: 3.791

2.  Age related reference ranges of respiratory rate and heart rate for children in South Africa.

Authors:  L A Wallis; I Maconochie
Journal:  Arch Dis Child       Date:  2006-01-06       Impact factor: 3.791

3.  Menarcheal age and growth pattern of Indian girls adopted in Sweden. II. Catch-up growth and final height.

Authors:  L A Proos; Y Hofvander; T Tuvemo
Journal:  Indian J Pediatr       Date:  1991 Jan-Feb       Impact factor: 1.967

4.  Preschool weights and heights of Europeans and five subgroups of Asians in Britain.

Authors:  A R Gatrad; N Birch; M Hughes
Journal:  Arch Dis Child       Date:  1994-09       Impact factor: 3.791

Review 5.  Is early puberty triggered by catch-up growth following undernutrition?

Authors:  Lemm Proos; Jan Gustafsson
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2012-05-09       Impact factor: 3.390

6.  Early Life Conditions and Physiological Stress following the Transition to Farming in Central/Southeast Europe: Skeletal Growth Impairment and 6000 Years of Gradual Recovery.

Authors:  Alison A Macintosh; Ron Pinhasi; Jay T Stock
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2016-02-04       Impact factor: 3.240

  6 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.