Results 281 to 290 of about 1,763,822 (337)

Calcium Intake and Hypertension

Science, 1983
In the article "The 1982 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine" (19 Nov., p. 765), the last full sentence in column 2 on page 765 should have read, "In the 1930's, Raphael Kurzrok and Charles Leib at Columbia University discovered that human seminal plasma contracted uterine smooth muscle." In the first sentence of the last paragraph in column 1 on ...
S M, Garn, F A, Larkin
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Calcium deprivation increases salt intake

American Journal of Physiology-Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology, 1990
Relative to rats fed chow or semisynthetic control diet, rats fed Ca2(+)-deficient diet increased daily "spontaneous" intake of 0.3 M NaCl solution by as much as eightfold. Intake of 0.3 M NaCl increased in monotonic relationship to the severity of Ca2+ deficiency, which was manipulated by both duration of depletion (0-32 days) and dietary Ca2 ...
M G, Tordoff, P M, Ulrich, J, Schulkin
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Optimal calcium intake.

NIH consensus statement, 1995
The National Institutes of Health Consensus Development Conference on Optimal Calcium Intake brought together experts from many different fields including osteoporosis and bone and dental health, nursing, dietetics, epidemiology, endocrinology, gastroenterology, nephrology, rheumatology, oncology, hypertension, nutrition and public education, and ...
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Calcium intake: covariates and confounders

The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 1991
One common nutrient postulated to be protective against osteoporosis, hypertension, and colon cancer is dietary calcium. We report here nutrient patterns by calcium intake in older adult residents of a geographically defined community in Southern California.
T L, Holbrook, E, Barrett-Connor
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Optimal Calcium Intake

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1994
IT HAS BEEN a decade since the 1984 Consensus Development Conference on Osteoporosis first suggested that increased intake of calcium might help prevent osteoporosis. Osteoporosis affects more than 25 million people in the United States and is the major underlying cause of bone fractures in postmenopausal women and the elderly.
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Effect of Divided Calcium Intake on Calcium Metabolism

The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, 1971
ABSTRACT Administration of milk to normal individuals in 6 divided doses during the day produced greater 24-hr urinary calcium excretion than the same amount of milk given in a single daily dose. To further study the effect of divided calcium doses on calcium metabolism, we performed radiocalcium kinetics and metabolic balance studies in 3 normal ...
A N, Kales, J M, Phang
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Calcium: Taste, Intake, and Appetite

Physiological Reviews, 2001
This review summarizes research on sensory and behavioral aspects of calcium homeostasis. These are fragmented fields, with essentially independent lines of research involving gustatory electrophysiology in amphibians, ethological studies in wild birds, nutritional studies in poultry, and experimental behavioral studies focused primarily on ...
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Genetics, calcium intake and osteoporosis

Proceedings of the Nutrition Society, 1998
Genetic factors explain a high proportion of the age-specific differences in bone density, size and turnover. The potential for interaction between hormonal, diet and lifestyle factors is likely to be important. Common allelic variation in the VDR is an example of normal gene variants altering Ca homoeostasis, with effects on body and bone size as well
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Protein Intake and Calcium Homeostasis

1994
The earliest study documenting the relationship between dietary protein and urinary calcium was published 70 years ago. Sherman (1920) reported that an all-meat diet fed to humans increased urinary calcium. Twenty years later McCance et al. (1942) confirmed this observation by showing that peptones, gluten, gelatin or egg white added to the diet ...
J E, Kerstetter, L H, Allen
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