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playground:newpage [11.23.2016] – created sallieqplayground:newpage [11.24.2016] (current) sallieq
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 +====== table of D findings ======
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 +^Author/year  ^study design  ^findings 
 +|Steven R. Cummings, MD; Douglas P. Kiel, MD, MPH; Dennis M. Black, PhD, 2016 6) |Two “high” doses (60 000 IU of vitamin D3 per month or 24 000 IU vitamin D3 plus 300 mg of calcifediol per month) achieved a serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25[OH]D) level of 30 ng/mL in 80% of participants, a level that has been recommended as best for reducing the risk of fractures |compared with a dose of 24 000 IU of vitamin D3 per month (equivalent to 800 IU per day), the higher doses had no effect on lower extremity physical performance and increased the risk of falls.|
 +|Karen E. Hansen, MD, MS; R. Erin Johnson, BS; Kaitlin R. Chambers, BS et al., 2015 7) |randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial from May 1, 2010, through July 31, 2013, and final visit on August 8, 2014. A total of 230 postmenopausal women 75 years or younger with baseline 25(OH)D levels of 14 through 27 ng/mL and no osteoporosis were studied. |“We found that compared with placebo, high-dose cholecalciferol had a very small effect on calcium absorption (1%) that did not translate into meaningful changes in lumbar spine, mean total-hip, femoral neck, or total-body BMD, trabecular bone score, TUG score, STS test score, muscle mass, number of falls, or number of fallers. ”|
  
 ====== Patient experiences ====== ====== Patient experiences ======
playground/newpage.txt · Last modified: 11.24.2016 by sallieq
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