Results 211 to 220 of about 7,076 (241)
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AVITAMINOSIS A IN GIARDIASIS

Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, 1949
IT HAS been repeatedly stated that severe infection with the protozoon Giardia lamblia acting as a barrier to absorption from the intestine often leads to celiac symptoms.1This view has been widely accepted and several times confirmed in pediatric literature, especially since there is experimental evidence that the absorption of vitamin A is intensely ...
Peter V. Véghelyi, Francis J. Láncos
openaire   +2 more sources

AVITAMINOSIS IN THE COURSE OF DIABETES: OCCURRENCE IN A CASE, WITH SYMPTOMS AND LESIONS OF BERIBERI PREDOMINATING

, 1926
Among the many diseases classified as avitaminosis, beriberi and keratomalacia have received considerable attention from both the clinical and the experimental points of view.
M. G. Wohl
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Ocular Manifestations Of Avitaminosis

Clinical and Experimental Optometry, 1953
Summary Until recently, vitamin deficiency was considered a phenomenon observed in animals fed experimental diets, or a syndrome prevalent only in countries where choice of foods was extremely limited. At present, however, it is recognised that vitamin deficiencies are widespread in occurrence and that subclinical deficiencies which warrant specific ...
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SMALL INTESTINAL DISORDERS IN AVITAMINOSIS

Annals of Internal Medicine, 1944
Excerpt Although the small intestine constitutes the greatest part of the gastrointestinal tract, it has not received the attention one might expect.
Herbert M. Stauffer   +2 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Aortic glycosaminoglycans in avitaminosis

Bulletin of Experimental Biology and Medicine, 1979
In hypovitaminosis K induced by a vitamin K-deficient diet or by Pelentan (ethyl biscoumacetate) a decrease was observed in the total content of glycosaminoglycans (GAG) and a change in the relative proportions of their fractions in the aortic wall of rats.
N. G. Bogdanov, P. N. Sharaev
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Mycotoxicosis and avitaminosis

International Journal of Environmental Studies, 1982
Beriberi and pellagra are caused by field fungi which attack paddy and maize crops in warm, damp, still weather. Adding Vitamin B1 and B2 to wheat flour may prevent avitaminosis but cannot prevent beriberi or pellagra. Moreover, the addition of vitamins, trace elements, hormones, sedatives, antibiotics and fishmeal to feed do not prevent the mycotoxins
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Avitaminosis Complicated by Cestodiasis; Case Report

, 1930
Excerpt Avitaminoses occur in man and other animals when diets poor or deficient in vitamins are eaten, but attention to protozoa and metazoa as "Vitamin robbers" in the intestinal tract capable of...
J. A. Mcintosh
semanticscholar   +1 more source

THE CHILD'S HEART IN AVITAMINOSIS

Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, 1935
Recently while attending a pathologicoclinical conference devoted exclusively to the demonstration of material obtained from children at autopsy, which is conducted once each month by Dr. Richard H. Jaffe, director of the department of pathology of the Cook County Hospital in Chicago, I was much impressed by the gross demonstration of several infants ...
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"ALLERGIC INERTIA AND AVITAMINOSIS"

Journal of the American Medical Association, 1932
ABSTRACT To the Editor: —I am much interested in the editorial in The Journal, April 23, entitled "Allergic Inertia Due to Avitaminosis." The editorial quotes the work of Hurwitz and Wessels purporting to show that there is a lack of parallelism between the reactivity of the bronchial smooth musculature and the uterine musculature.
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Hyper- and Avitaminosis in Micro-Organisms

Nature, 1947
The influence of vitamins on micro-organisms is usually estimated according to their accelerating effect upon the growth-rate of micro-organisms. However, cases are known in which some morpho-genetic or physiological effects are clearly observed without any visible influence upon the growth-rate.
openaire   +3 more sources

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