The effects of inanition and The effects of inanition and malnutrition upon growth and structure effectsofinaniti00jack Year: 1925 Fig. 48.—Adipose tissue from the tela sub- cutanea of an emaciated, athreptic infant. Adipose cells unequally atrophied; some still contain a moderate amount of fat in droplets of variable size. Cell nuclei and granular cytoplasm evident. X400. (Parrot '77.) Fig. 49.—Adipose tissue ' from the tela subcutanea of an extremely emaci- ated, athreptic infant. The atrophic adipose cells have been almost completely depleted of fat, and are closely packed so as to resem


The effects of inanition and The effects of inanition and malnutrition upon growth and structure effectsofinaniti00jack Year: 1925 Fig. 48.—Adipose tissue from the tela sub- cutanea of an emaciated, athreptic infant. Adipose cells unequally atrophied; some still contain a moderate amount of fat in droplets of variable size. Cell nuclei and granular cytoplasm evident. X400. (Parrot '77.) Fig. 49.—Adipose tissue ' from the tela subcutanea of an extremely emaci- ated, athreptic infant. The atrophic adipose cells have been almost completely depleted of fat, and are closely packed so as to resemble the Malpighian layer of the epidermis. X400. (Parrot '77.) even in the adult (Gehewe '52). Beneke (05) stated that the cells of a lipoma differ from ordinary fat cells in that they do not atrophy in general emaciation of the body. In cases of malnutritional edema (due chiefly to partial inanition,


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