Results 171 to 180 of about 11,720 (199)
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Lactose Intolerance in Thailand

Nature, 1969
MCGILLIVRAY1 has suggested that lactose intolerance in Asians is limited to “selected groups of adult students in unfamiliar surroundings” (studying abroad) and that it is “a rare condition which must be seen against the background of malnutrition”.
T. Sanguanbhokhai   +2 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Recognition of Lactose Intolerance

Hospital Practice, 1976
Evidence has been accumulating that except where dairying has been carried on for centuries, postweaning inability to digest milk is the norm for humans as well as other land mammals. Given the ethnic diversity of the U.S., there may well be 30 million Americans who cannot drink milk without developing symptoms and many instinctively learn to avoid it.
openaire   +3 more sources

Lactose feeding in lactose-intolerant monkeys

The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 1973
By the criteria used for human screening, adult cebus monkeys were "tolerant" to an oral load of lactose (1 g/kg body weight), whereas adult squirrel, rhesus, and galago monkeys were mostly "intolerant." To assess the effects of lactose feeding on the lactose tolerance test and on intestinal enzyme levels, 7 of 12 "lactose-intolerant" adult galago ...
Stanley N. Gershoff   +4 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Lactose intolerance in the adolescent

Journal of Adolescent Health Care, 1982
What do Oriental adults, some American blacks, Eskimos, American Indians, American Jews, and some adolescents with abdominal pain have in common? The answer is lactose intolerance. An individual with lactose intolerance is unable to adequately digest a large lactose load equivalent to one or two quarts of milk.
openaire   +3 more sources

Lactose Intolerance

2006
Abstract A 6-year-old African American boy presented with a 6-month history of nausea, abdominal discomfort, and diarrhea with three to four watery stools a day associated with passage of much gas. These complaints began soon after he started first grade when he was required to drink 2 cups of milk with his school lunch.The symptoms ...
Marcy P Osgood, Abiodun O Johnson
openaire   +1 more source

Is it just lactose intolerance?

Allergy and Asthma Proceedings, 2012
Acquired delayed-onset hypolactasia is a common autosomal recessive condition. Cow's milk allergies, conversely, are less common conditions that may manifest with equivalent symptoms and are able to simulate and/or aggravate lactose intolerance. This study was designed to evaluate the contribution of IgE-mediated cow's milk sensitization to the ...
dos Santos Ra   +7 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Lactose intolerance.

Asia Pacific journal of clinical nutrition, 2015
Lactose is the main carbohydrate in infant feeding, but its impact decreases as the child gets older and consumes less milk and dairy products. Congenital lactose intolerance is a very rare condition. However, lactase activity may be low and need to mature during the first weeks of life in many infants.
openaire   +2 more sources

Lactose Intolerance

AJN, American Journal of Nursing, 1977
TONI TRIPP-REIMER, RANDY BETH POLLACK
openaire   +3 more sources

Management of Lactose Intolerance

Scandinavian Journal of Gastroenterology, 1994
The management of lactose intolerance comprises two parts: (1) the basic principles of treatment in persons intolerant to a dietary dose of lactose, and (2) main manoeuvres to reduce the lactose content in food, and/or consumption of special products of milk or exogenous lactase enzyme.
openaire   +2 more sources

Lactose Intolerance in Asians

Nature, 1969
THE report of a postulated lactose intolerance in Asians1 said of food aid programmes: “It could be that aid in this form with the subsequent induction of diarrhoea is not the most efficient method of helping a malnourished community”. Subsequent criticism of this comment2 questioned the validity of extending the results of a laboratory experiment, in ...
openaire   +3 more sources

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