Results 301 to 310 of about 370,832 (341)

Vitamin D Deficiency as a Debatable Modulator of Outcomes in Transfusion-Dependent Thalassemia; An Overview of the Latest Findings: A Narrative Review. [PDF]

open access: yesHealth Sci Rep
Bazi A   +6 more
europepmc   +1 more source

Vitamin D Deficiency

New England Journal of Medicine, 2007
Once foods in the United States were fortified with vitamin D, rickets appeared to have been conquered, and many considered major health problems from vitamin D deficiency resolved. But vitamin D deficiency is common. This review considers the role of vitamin D in skeletal and nonskeletal health and suggests strategies for the prevention and treatment ...
Roger, Bouillon   +2 more
  +9 more sources

Vitamin D Deficiency

2020
Vitamin D is essential to maintaining calcium and phosphate homeostasis and bone health. Many children do not achieve an adequate vitamin D status due to insufficient sunlight exposure and poor dietary intake. Vitamin D deficiency is common, affecting approximately 50% of children and adolescents. It is recommended to screen for vitamin D deficiency in
Megan B. Brickley   +2 more
  +6 more sources

Vitamin D Deficiency

Internal Medicine News, 2011
In the Western world, the majority of morbidity and mortality are caused by multifactorial diseases. Some risk factors are related to more than one type of disease. These so-called universal risk factors are highly relevant to the population, as reduction of universal risk factors may reduce the prevalence of several types of multifactorial disease ...
WILLIAM E. GOLDEN, ROBERT H. HOPKINS
  +4 more sources

Subclinical vitamin D deficiency

Best Practice & Research Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, 2012
The optimal vitamin D status, as defined by serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D [25(OH)D], is still controversial. Some individuals are at risk for subclinical vitamin D deficiency, as defined by serum 25(OH)D levels between 25 and 75 nmol/L, and up to 80-100% of the entire population can display inadequate serum 25(OH)D values depending on latitude and ...
CIANFEROTTI, LUISELLA, C. Marcocci
openaire   +3 more sources

Deconstructing Vitamin D Deficiency

Science Translational Medicine, 2013
Vitamin D deficiency causes cracking and aging of bone tissue.
Lorenz C, Hofbauer, Christine, Hamann
openaire   +2 more sources

Tackling vitamin D deficiency

Postgraduate Medicine, 2006
Vitamin D deficiency is very common in the United States and often goes unrecognized by primary care physicians. This oversight is unfortunate, because vitamin D plays an important role in bone development and muscle function. It also facilitates absorption of calcium and phosphate from the gut and kidney, suppresses parathyroid hormone (PTH), and acts
Heidi S, Powell, Deborah, Greenberg
openaire   +2 more sources

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