• 1 January 1982
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 134  (MAR) , 299-314
Abstract
The influence of a low Ca and vitamin D-deficient diet on the growth and form of the skull of the growing rat was studied using a cephalometric radiographic technique. This technique was used to obtain an intra-individual cephalometric description of the normal growth and form of the skull at different ages during postnatal growth in the rat. The methodological error and the biological variation between animals were significantly lower than the registered growth changes, demonstrating the suitability of the technique. In the animals fed the low Ca and vitamin D-deficient diet an impaired increase in body weight was found. This diet caused changes in cranial dimensions, both when the deficient animals were compared with control animals of the same age and with control animals with the same weight. The vitamin D-free and low Ca diet evidently caused a disturbed osteogenesis in growth sites determining the growth and form of the viscerocranium and its relation to the neurocranium.