The parents of Arianna Foster, a 'malnourished’ baby who died at 11 months old, have been indicted by a Madison County grand jury, records show.

Joshua Lee Foster and Porsha Bole are indicted on charges of aggravated child abuse, court records show. They are accused of allowing Arianna to “become malnourished and dehydrated” and “failing to provide appropriate medical care,” the indictment states.

The case is set for trial Sept. 30. If convicted, 29-year-old Foster and 31-year-old Bole face up to life in prison.

Arianna died Sept. 29, 2018 at her family’s Hazel Green home. When she died at 11 months old, Arianna weighed about 10 pounds — just one pound more than she weighed at birth, according to court records. Babies are expected to triple their birth weight by about age 1, according to Mayo Clinic.

After Arianna first left the hospital at birth, she didn’t receive any further treatment from a doctor, an investigator testified at a preliminary hearing last year. Foster and Bole had two other young children, neither of whom received medical care after birth, Madison County sheriff’s Investigator Crystal Bailey told a judge.

Bailey testified that Arianna’s body was “extremely frail” and “highly malnourished.”

Porsha Bole is shown covering her face in this Nov. 1, 2018 photo as she leaves the Madison County Courthouse in Huntsville, Ala.

An attorney for Bole didn’t respond to requests for comment.

In an interview at the sheriff’s investigative headquarters, Bole said Arianna had a healthy appetite and ate regularly. But Bailey testified the child’s belly was swollen, and her body showed other signs of malnourishment.

When questioned about his daughter’s condition, Foster told investigators he “works to provide for the family," and it was Bole’s responsibility to take care of the children, Bailey testified.

Foster’s attorney declined to comment.

Foster and Bole are held in the Madison County jail with bail set at $60,000 each.

A grand jury issues indictments when it decides prosecutors have enough evidence to take cases to trial.