Home

Differences

This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.

Link to this comparison view

Both sides previous revisionPrevious revision
Next revision
Previous revision
Next revisionBoth sides next revision
home:tests:dexa [01.03.2019] – [Further Information] sallieqhome:tests:dexa [01.03.2019] – [Further Information] sallieq
Line 54: Line 54:
  Epidemiological study finds a strong association between high 1,25 D levels and osteoporosis. Relationships between bone mineral density, serum vitamin D metabolites and calcium:phosphorus intake in healthy perimenopausal women. Brot C, Jorgensen N, Madsen OR, Jensen LB, Sorensen OH.  Epidemiological study finds a strong association between high 1,25 D levels and osteoporosis. Relationships between bone mineral density, serum vitamin D metabolites and calcium:phosphorus intake in healthy perimenopausal women. Brot C, Jorgensen N, Madsen OR, Jensen LB, Sorensen OH.
  
-The Danish epidemiologist Brot studied 500 healthy women ( that is they were not drawn from a population with particular health issues) aged 42 to 58 and concluded that in this group bone density was strongly inversely proportional to 1,25 D levels ( that is low bone density was strongly associated with high 1,25 D levels) and only rather weakly directly proportional to 25 D levels. The sample was chosen randomly - and was not done to test the impact of any particular treatment programme. ({{pubmed>long:10363752}}))  +The Danish epidemiologist Brot studied 500 healthy women ( that is they were not drawn from a population with particular health issues) aged 42 to 58 and concluded that in this group bone density was strongly inversely proportional to 1,25 D levels ( that is low bone density was strongly associated with high 1,25 D levels) and only rather weakly directly proportional to 25 D levels. The sample was chosen randomly - and was not done to test the impact of any particular treatment programme. (({{pubmed>long:10363752}}))   
 + 
 +Influence of smoking (({{pubmed>long:10602348}}))   
 + 
 +vitamin K(1) intake was not associated with effects on BMD or fracture risk.   (({{pubmed>long:16683180}}))   
 + 
 +Dietary intake of folate, but not vitamin B2 or B12, is associated with increased bone mineral density 5 years after the menopause: results from a 10-year follow-up study in early postmenopausal women.  (({{pubmed>long:18175033}}))  
          
  
home/tests/dexa.txt · Last modified: 09.14.2022 by 127.0.0.1
© 2015, Autoimmunity Research Foundation. All Rights Reserved.