| Results 451 - 500 of 1410 | ||
| < 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 > | ||
|
Nielsen Forrest H - - 2004
A study with human volunteers was conducted to test the hypothesis that naturally occurring inadequate intakes of magnesium induce negative magnesium balance and undesirable changes in calcium metabolism variables, and that these changes are influenced by dietary boron. Diets composed of ordinary Western foods providing approximately 118 and 318 mg ...
|
||
|
Lappe Joan M - - 2004
OBJECTIVE: To determine whether pubertal girls assigned to calcium-rich diets or their usual calcium intakes differ significantly in weight gain. DESIGN: This is a pilot study conducted on data from an experimental research project. SUBJECTS/SETTING: The sample included 59 girls, 9 years of age, from Omaha metropolitan communities. INTERVENTION: Participants ...
|
||
|
Effects of the steroidal aromatase inhibitor exemestane and the nonsteroidal aromatase inhibitor ...
Goss Paul E - - 2004
PURPOSE: Exemestane (EXE) and letrozole (LET) are third-generation aromatase inhibitors currently prescribed for postmenopausal hormone-dependent breast cancer. The impact on end organs of estrogen depletion in menopausal women is of significant clinical importance. We studied the effects of EXE, its principal metabolite, 17-hydroexemestane (17-H-EXE), and LET on bone and lipid ...
|
||
|
MacLeay J M - - 2004
Dietary-induced metabolic acidosis (DIMA) may be a significant confounder in the development of osteoporosis. Diets that are acidifying are typically rich in proteins and grains and relatively poor in fruits and vegetables. Previous studies have not examined whether an interaction between estrogen depletion and DIMA have a compounded affect on ...
|
||
|
Ince B Avery - - 2004
High-protein diets increase calciuria. No previous studies have examined the ad libitum U.S. diet's effect on calciuria or bone resorption.Thirty-nine healthy, premenopausal women consuming ad libitum diets [mean, 1.1 g/kg protein, 819 mg (20.5 mmol) Ca, 1152 mg (37 mmol) P, 129 mmol Na] were switched to isocaloric diets containing ...
|
||
|
Ferraz Renato Ribeiro Nogueira - - 2004
BACKGROUND: Unabsorbed fat and bile acids may react with calcium in the intestinal lumen, limiting the amount of free calcium binding with oxalate and thereby raising intestinal oxalate absorption leading to hyperoxaluria. The aim of the present study was to determine whether orlistat (Xenical), a gastrointestinal lipase inhibitor, might increase ...
|
||
|
Grinder-Pedersen Lisbeth - - 2004
BACKGROUND: Single-meal studies have indicated that calcium inhibits iron absorption in humans. However, numerous dietary factors influence iron absorption, and the effect of calcium may not be as pronounced when calcium is served as part of a whole diet. OBJECTIVE: We investigated the effect of 3 sources of calcium served ...
|
||
|
New Susan A - - 2004
Public health strategies targeting the prevention of poor bone health on a population-wide basis are urgently required, with particular emphasis being placed on modifiable factors such as nutrition. The aim of this review was to assess the impact of a vegetarian diet on indices of skeletal integrity to address specifically ...
|
||
|
Cifuentes Mariana - - 2004
BACKGROUND: Weight loss (WL) reduces bone mass and increases fracture risk. Mechanisms regulating calcium metabolism during WL are unclear. OBJECTIVE: The objective was to assess the effect of 6 wk of WL at 2 different amounts of calcium intake [normal (NlCa): 1 g/d; high (HiCa): 1.8 g/d] on true fractional ...
|
||
|
Lewandowski Sonja - - 2004
OBJECTIVE: In South Africa, urolithiasis is extremely rare in the black population, but is common in the white population. The objective of this study was to investigate the individual effects of 5 different dietary and supplemental challenges (high dietary calcium, calcium supplement, vitamin B6 supplement, L-glutamine supplement, and L-cysteine supplement) ...
|
||
|
Sonawane V R - - 2004
Many trials based on the basic phenomena of isotopic dilution, adsorption, ion exchange, chelation, etc., have been attempted for the decorporation of radiostrontium, particularly Sr, after its entry in the in vivo system. We have recently demonstrated a non-isotopic carrier effect of some common calcium salts (calcium = 9 mg ...
|
||
|
Lewandowski Sonja - - 2004
Idiopathic calcium oxalate urolithiasis is a frequent and recurrent multifactorial disease. This review focuses on urinary and dietary risk factors for this disease and conservative strategies for rectifying them. Dietary oxalate and calcium and their respective urinary excretions have been extensively investigated during the last 10 years. Urinary oxalate has ...
|
||
|
Pazianas M - - 2005
Calcium malabsorption, hypocalcemia and skeletal demineralization are well-recognized features of untreated celiac disease. This study investigates calcium absorption and bone mineral density (BMD) after a prolonged, over 4 years, treatment with a gluten-free diet. Twenty-four adult females with treated celiac disease and twenty age- and sex-matched control subjects were studied. ...
|
||
|
Mittal Rama Devi - - 2004
Oxalate plays a crucial role in the formation of most renal stones. Oxalate is a common constituent of most diets and a byproduct of metabolism, and if it is not sufficiently degraded, it may accumulate. In humans, gut bacteria degrade 70 to 100 mg of oxalate per day. Oxalobacter formigenes ...
|
||
|
Iyengar G V - - 2004
Within the framework of a Coordinated Research Project (CRP) organized by the International Atomic Energy Agency, Vienna, the daily dietary intakes of seven elements by adult populations living in nine Asian countries were estimated. The countries that participated in the study were Bangladesh, China, India, Indonesia, Japan, Pakistan, Philippines, South ...
|
||
|
Kumar Arun - - 2004
The study was undertaken to observe the effect of radish on urinary calcium oxalate excretion. Early morning midstream urine (MSU) samples collected from 36 subjects were analyzed continuously for a period of 14 days for the presence of calcium oxalate crystals. Of these, 21 cases were of renal stone and ...
|
||
|
Jiang Guizhen - - 2004
The effect of therapeutic agents on trabecular bone loss in the mandible was investigated in ovariectomized rats. Eighty-seven Wistar SPF female rats were ovariectomized (OVX) or given a sham operation (Sham), and maintained on a diet containing 0.1% calcium. Four weeks later, groups of OVX rats were treated with estriol ...
|
||
|
Rowlands Ann V - - 2004
The purpose of this study was to assess the interactive effects of habitual physical activity (total and vigorous intensity) and calcium intake on bone mineral content (BMC) in prepubertal boys and girls. Seventy-six children, aged 8-11 yr, wore accelerometers for up to 7 days to assess activity. Calcium intake was ...
|
||
|
Lulich Jody P - - 2004
Ten client-owned cats with calcium oxalate (CaOx) urolithiasis were evaluated to determine the effect of diet on urine CaOx saturation. Two dietary treatments were evaluated in each cat: the diet consumed just prior to urolith detection and a canned diet formulated to prevent CaOx uroliths. This study revealed that hypercalciuria ...
|
||
|
Won Dong-Sun - - 2004
A three-month-old female Siberian tiger cub with hindlimb ataxia was referred to the veterinary teaching hospital of Konkuk University. The patient was fed only beef without supplementation of calcium and vitamins after weaning. The tiger was presented with ataxia and back pain on digital palpation. In addition, abnormal gait, reluctance ...
|
||
|
Schlumbohm Christina - - 2004
It has been reported from rats and mice that blood and bone calcium can be normalised in the absence of Vitamin D hormone or its receptor by dietary means. It was the aim of this study to test, whether a similar result can be obtained with pigs. Piglets with inherited ...
|
||
|
Pellizzon Michael - - 2004
Modification of milk fat both by partially replacing saturated FA with oleic acid (18:1) and by increasing calcium intake independently reduces plasma cholesterol. Whether modification of both factors together would synergistically reduce plasma cholesterol is unknown. Seventy-two male golden Syrian hamsters were separated into four diet treatment groups (n = ...
|
||
|
Zemel Michael B - - 2004
Dietary calcium plays a pivotal role in the regulation of energy metabolism because high-calcium diets attenuate adipocyte lipid accretion and weight gain during the overconsumption of an energy-dense diet and increase lipolysis and preserve thermogenesis during caloric restriction, which thereby markedly accelerates weight loss. Intracellular Ca(2+) plays a key regulatory ...
|
||
|
Juráni Marián - - 2004
This is the first study of plasma biochemical parameters in free-living altricial birds during an entire developmental period in a nest, represented by European starling (Sturnus vulgaris). Dynamics of postnatal changes from hatching until close to fledging (days 1 to 15) were registered. Parameters of protein metabolism represented by total ...
|
||
|
Dardenne Olivier - - 2004
The treatment of choice for pseudo Vitamin D deficiency rickets (PDDR), caused by mutations in the 25-hydroxyvitamin D-1alpha-hydroxylase (CYP27B1; 1alpha-OHase) gene, is replacement therapy with 1,25(OH)(2)D(3). We have previously engineered an animal model of PDDR by targeted inactivation of the 1alpha-OHase gene in mice (Endocrinology 142 (2001) 3135). Replacement therapy ...
|
||
|
Iwamoto Jun - - 2004
The purpose of this study was to clarify the differential effect of vitamin K and vitamin D supplementation on bone mass in young rats fed a normal or low calcium diet. Ninety female Sprague-Dawley rats, 6 weeks of age, were randomized by stratified weight method into nine groups with 10 ...
|
||
|
Spence, Candee Meredith
The purpose of this study was to determine if there was a significant difference in weight loss, body fat, waist circumference, or diet quality among participants taking calcium or placebo supplements in a lifestyle intervention program. Three participants ages 52-55 completed the 14 week program. Two participants took 1,000 milligrams ...
|
||
|
Sato Tomoaki - - 2004
There is increasing evidence that ovarian steroids and calcium ions are involved in learning and memory. To examine the effect of ovarian steroids on learning and memory under a low-calcium condition, middle-aged female rats were fed either a low-calcium (0.02% Ca) or a normal-calcium (1.25% Ca) diet. All rats were ...
|
||
|
Zemel Michael B - - 2004
OBJECTIVE: Increasing 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D in response to low-calcium diets stimulates adipocyte Ca2+ influx and, as a consequence, stimulates lipogenesis, suppresses lipolysis, and increases lipid accumulation, whereas increasing dietary calcium inhibits these effects and markedly accelerates fat loss in mice subjected to caloric restriction. Our objective was to determine the effects ...
|
||
|
Pratap Rudra M P - - 2004
OBJECTIVES: The reasons for the very low incidence of the disease neurolathyrism in humans even after excessive consumption of the pulse, Lathyrus sativus, under severe drought and famine conditions, and its continued consumption by large populations during normal periods without any deleterious effects have been examined in the context of ...
|
||
|
Lundy F P - - 2004
Fatty amides of high oleate fats and calcium salts of palm oil were reported to resist biohydrogenation by ruminal microorganisms. This study was conducted to determine whether converting polyunsaturated fat sources to amides and calcium salts had equal ability to resist biohydrogenation. A total mixed ration consisting of forage and ...
|
||
|
Marangella M - - 2004
Western diets rich in animal protein result in long-term acid loading that, despite corresponding increases in net renal acid excretion, may induce a chronic state of acidemia. This may have deleterious effects on both the kidney and bone, by increasing the risk of calcium stone in the former and leading ...
|
||
|
Dawson-Hughes Bess - - 2004
Currently there is no consensus on the impact of dietary protein on calcium and bone metabolism. This study was conducted to examine the effect of increasing protein intake on urinary calcium excretion and to compare circulating levels of IGF-I and biochemical markers of bone turnover in healthy older men and ...
|
||
|
Vítolo M R - - 2004
Concentrations of calcium and magnesium were measured in mature milk, collected between 30 and 90 days after childbirth, from a group of 90 mothers between 14 and 39 years of age, exclusively breastfeeding. The group was divided into three sub-groups: low socioeconomic-level adolescents (LSAd), low socioeconomic-level adults (LSA), and high ...
|
||
|
Bowen Jane - - 2004
Weight loss induces bone resorption and this can be attenuated by calcium supplementation. Protein-rich diets were recently associated with favorable effects on bone density, although this remains controversial. We hypothesized that a diet high in calcium and protein would minimize bone resorption during weight loss compared with a lower calcium, ...
|
||
|
Mandel Neil S - - 2004
PURPOSE: The pig has been extensively used in biomedical research because of the similarities in organ structure and function to humans. It is desirable to have an animal model of oxaluria and urolithiasis with physiological, anatomical and nutritional characteristics that more closely resemble those of man. In this study we ...
|
||
|
Siener R - - 2004
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the effect of a mineral water rich in magnesium (337 mg/l), calcium (232 mg/l) and bicarbonate (3388 mg/l) on urine composition and the risk of calcium oxalate crystallization. DESIGN: A total of 12 healthy male volunteers participated in the study. During the baseline phase, subjects collected two ...
|
||
|
Mitamura Rieko - - 2004
We examined the effects of feeding raffinose on intestinal calcium absorption in ovariectomized rats by two separate experiments. In experiment 1, female Sprague-Dawley rats (6 wk old) were divided into two groups: sham operation and ovariectomy, and fed diets with or without raffinose (30 g/kg diet) for 4 wk. In ...
|
||
|
Mehlenbeck Robyn S - - 2004
Calcium intake in adolescent and young adult female athletes often is inadequate to optimize peak bone mass, an important determinant of osteoporosis risk. The purpose of this study was to determine if calcium supplementation in eumenorrheic female collegiate athletes increases intake to recommended levels and promotes increases in bone mineral ...
|
||
|
Shapses Sue A - - 2004
Data suggest that a diet deficient in calcium is associated with higher body weight and that augmenting calcium intake may reduce weight and fat gain or enhance loss. Our aim was to determine whether calcium supplementation during a weight loss intervention affects body fat or weight loss. Data were combined ...
|
||
|
Caudarella R - - 2004
Several studies have indicated that up to 60% of idiopathic calcium stone formers present hypercalciuria. Many authors have described reduced bone mineral density (BMD) in stoneformers with hypercalciuria, but osteopenia has also been found in normocalciuric patients. Moreover, Jaeger's group found that bone mass was reduced in all patients with ...
|
||
|
Blanaru Janice L - - 2004
BACKGROUND: The addition of arachidonic acid (AA) and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) to infant formula was recently approved in North America. In piglets, dietary AA is linked to elevations in bone mass. OBJECTIVE: The objective was to investigate the effects of varied amounts of dietary AA on bone modeling and bone ...
|
||
|
Kamitani Y - - 2004
OBJECTIVE: Grape seed proanthocyanidins extract (GSPE), a flavonoid, has a beneficial effect on physical health, which may include the health of bone. The purpose of the present study was to investigate the effects of GSPE on mandibular bone by examining trabecular and cortical bone density, mineral content, and non-invasive bone ...
|
||
|
Pak Charles Y C - - 2004
A variety of dietary and metabolic factors may contribute or cause stone formation in idiopathic calcium oxalate nephrolithiasis. Dietary factors include a high intake of animal proteins, oxalate and sodium, and a low intake of fluids and potassium-containing citrus products. Some of the metabolic causes of stones are hypercalciuria, hypocitraturia, ...
|
||
|
Iwamoto J - - 2004
OBJECTIVE: We examined the effect of vitamin D supplementation on bone growth in young rats fed a normal or low calcium diet. METHODS: Fifty female Sprague-Dawley rats, 6 weeks of age, were randomized by stratified weight method into five groups with 10 rats in each group: baseline control, 0.5% (normal) ...
|
||
|
Wu Jian - - 2004
The purpose of this study was to examine the effectiveness of collagen peptide intake on bone metabolism in growing (G) and calcium-deficient mature (M) rats. As for the dosages used, they were amounts equal to the recommended supplements for humans (0.166 g/kg body weight (BW) per day: Coll-1G and Coll-1M ...
|
||
|
Reid Ian R - - 2004
For about a century there has been recognition that calcium and lipids bind to one another in the gut, each interfering with the other's absorption. Calcium also causes malabsorption of bile acids, which is likely to contribute further to malabsorption of fat. High dietary calcium intakes may also have stimulatory ...
|
||
|
Macdonald Helen M - - 2004
BACKGROUND: The menopausal transition is characterized by rapid bone loss. Few data exist on the role of nutrition. OBJECTIVE: The objective of the study was to ascertain which dietary factors influence perimenopausal skeletal loss. DESIGN: A longitudinal study was conducted of 891 women aged 45-55 y at baseline and 50-59 ...
|
||
|
Akhter P - - 2004
To cope with nuclear emergency effectively due to ingestion of fission fragment (90)Sr, adequacy of nutritionally and radiologically important elements strontium and calcium was studied in typical Pakistani diet and baseline analytical data were generated. Concentrations of strontium and calcium were measured by using inductively coupled plasma-atomic emission spectroscopy (ICP-AES) ...
|
||
|
Stevenson Abigail E - - 2004
Nutrient intake and urine composition were analyzed in calcium oxalate (CaOx)stone-forming and healthy control dogs to identify factors that contribute to CaOx urolithiasis. Stone-forming dogs had significantly lower intake of sodium, calcium, potassium, and phosphorus and significantly higher urinary calcium and oxalate concentrations, calcium excretion, and CaOx relative supersaturation (RSS). ...
|
||
| < 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 > | ||