Calcium homeostasis and bone metabolism during pregnancy, lactation, and postweaning: a longitudinal study.
- N. A. Cross, L. Hillman, S. H. Allen, G. F. Krause, N. Vieira
- MedicineAmerican Journal of Clinical Nutrition
- 1 March 1995
It is concluded that absorption and urinary excretion of calcium increase during pregnancy whereas bone turnover increases during late pregnancy and lactation; only renal changes consistent with an increase in PTH were seen postweaning.
Risk factors for SIDS. Results of the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development SIDS Cooperative Epidemiological Study.
- H. Hoffman, K. Damus, L. Hillman, E. Krongrad
- MedicineAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences
- 1988
Correcting vitamin D insufficiency improves insulin sensitivity in obese adolescents: a randomized controlled trial.
- A. Belenchia, A. Tosh, L. Hillman, C. Peterson
- MedicineAmerican Journal of Clinical Nutrition
- 1 April 2013
The correction of poor vitamin D status through dietary supplementation may be an effective addition to the standard treatment of obesity and its associated insulin resistance.
Epidemiology of the sudden infant death syndrome: maternal, neonatal, and postneonatal risk factors.
- H. Hoffman, L. Hillman
- Medicine, PsychologyClinics of Perinatology
- 1 December 1992
Changes in bone mineral density and markers of bone remodeling during lactation and postweaning in women consuming high amounts of calcium
- N. Cross, L. Hillman, S. H. Allen, G. Krause
- Biology, MedicineJournal of Bone and Mineral Research
- 1 September 1995
An increase in markers of bone turnover and a loss of BMD of the spine during lactation appears to be part of the physiological changes of lactation and not preventable by increasing calcium intake above the recommended dietary allowance (RDA).
Risk Factors for SIDS
- H. Hoffman, K. Damus, L. Hillman, E. Krongrad
- Medicine
- 1 August 1988
This research presents a novel and scalable approach called “Smart Cardiology’s probabilistic approach” to estimating the risks and benefits of certain types of pregnancy-related adverse events to infants and young children.
Bone mineral density and biochemical markers of bone metabolism in ankylosing spondylitis.
- W. Bronson, S. Walker, L. Hillman, D. Keisler, T. Hoyt, S. H. Allen
- Medicine, BiologyJournal of Rheumatology
- 1 May 1998
BMD of subjects with AS is decreased, in spite of normal calcium homeostasis and bone remodeling indices, according to dual energy x-ray absorptiometry.
Bone mineralization and bone mineral metabolism in children with juvenile rheumatoid arthritis.
- P. Pepmueller, J. Cassidy, S. H. Allen, L. Hillman
- MedicineArthritis & Rheumatism
- 1 May 1996
An association between decreased bone mineralization in JRA and low bone formation that is related to disease severity is suggested, and efforts to stimulate bone formation need to be considered clinically in prepubertal children with active JRA.
Decreased bone mineralization in children with phenylketonuria under treatment
- L. Hillman, C. Schlotzhauer, R. Hillman
- MedicineEuropean Journal of Pediatrics
- 2009
Compared to the total controls and the paired controls, decreases were seen in markers of bone formation; bone alkaline phosphatase, osteocalcin, and procollagen type I carboxyterminal propeptide and the changes noted could not be related after age correction to serum phenylalanine levels, protein intake, or mineral intakes.
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