70th Anniversary Conference on 'Vitamins in early development and healthy ageing: impact on infectious and chronic disease' Symposium 2: Vitamins in muscular and skeletal function Does vitamin D during pregnancy impact offspring growth and bone?
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] M. Marazita,et al. Maternal serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentrations are associated with small-for-gestational age births in white women. , 2010, The Journal of nutrition.
[2] T. Vrijkotte,et al. Maternal early pregnancy vitamin D status in relation to fetal and neonatal growth: results of the multi-ethnic Amsterdam Born Children and their Development cohort , 2010, British Journal of Nutrition.
[3] D. Roth,et al. Vitamin D replacement in pregnant women in rural north India: a pilot study , 2010, European Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
[4] C. Cooper,et al. Low maternal vitamin D status and fetal bone development: Cohort study , 2010, Journal of bone and mineral research : the official journal of the American Society for Bone and Mineral Research.
[5] J. Carlin,et al. Maternal 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentration and offspring birth size: effect modification by infant VDR genotype , 2009, European Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
[6] J. Tobias,et al. Estimated maternal ultraviolet B exposure levels in pregnancy influence skeletal development of the child. , 2009, The Journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism.
[7] C. Cooper,et al. Maternal vitamin D status during pregnancy and childhood bone mass at age 9 years: a longitudinal study , 2006, The Lancet.
[8] J. Tobias,et al. Bone mass in childhood is related to maternal diet in pregnancy , 2005, Osteoporosis International.
[9] H. Weiler,et al. Vitamin D deficiency and whole-body and femur bone mass relative to weight in healthy newborns , 2005, Canadian Medical Association Journal.
[10] P. Carmeliet,et al. Intestinal Calcium Transporter Genes Are Upregulated by Estrogens and the Reproductive Cycle Through Vitamin D Receptor‐Independent Mechanisms , 2003, Journal of bone and mineral research : the official journal of the American Society for Bone and Mineral Research.
[11] J. King,et al. A longitudinal study of calcium homeostasis during human pregnancy and lactation and after resumption of menses. , 1998, The American journal of clinical nutrition.
[12] G. F. Krause,et al. Calcium homeostasis and bone metabolism during pregnancy, lactation, and postweaning: a longitudinal study. , 1995, The American journal of clinical nutrition.
[13] A. Oestreich,et al. Prospective study of vitamin D supplementation and rickets in China. , 1992, The Journal of pediatrics.
[14] R. K. Marya,et al. Effect of vitamin D supplementation during pregnancy on foetal growth. , 1988, The Indian journal of medical research.
[15] Y. Weisman,et al. Serum 25‐Hydroxyvitamin D Levels in Congenital Craniotabes , 1988, Acta paediatrica Scandinavica.
[16] B. Gügi,et al. Vitamin D Supplementation in Pregnancy: A Controlled Trial of Two Methods , 1986, Obstetrics and gynecology.
[17] P. Dandona,et al. Parathyroid hormone and neonatal calcium homeostasis: evidence for secondary hyperparathyroidism in the Asian neonate. , 1986, Metabolism: clinical and experimental.
[18] F. Glorieux,et al. Vitamin D supplementation during pregnancy: effect on neonatal calcium homeostasis. , 1986, The Journal of pediatrics.
[19] F. Glorieux,et al. In vitro metabolism of 25-hydroxycholecalciferol by isolated cells from human decidua. , 1985, The Journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism.
[20] B. Walters. Mineral content of the forearms of babies born to Asian and white mothers. , 1983, British medical journal.
[21] O. Brooke,et al. Intrauterine vitamin D nutrition and postnatal growth in Asian infants. , 1981, British medical journal.
[22] S. Pocock,et al. Maternal vitamin D intake and mineral metabolism in mothers and their newborn infants. , 1980, British medical journal.
[23] J. Maxwell,et al. Vitamin D supplements in pregnant Asian women: effects on calcium status and fetal growth. , 1980, British medical journal.
[24] L. Paunier,et al. 25-hydroxyvitamin D and calcium levels in maternal, cord and infant serum in relation to maternal vitamin D intake. , 1978, Helvetica paediatrica acta.
[25] M. Moncrieff,et al. Congenital rickets due to maternal vitamin D deficiency. , 1974, Archives of disease in childhood.
[26] L. F. Hill,et al. True fetal rickets. , 1974, The British journal of radiology.
[27] F. Cockburn,et al. Enamel hypoplasia of the teeth associated with neonatal tetany: a manifestation of maternal vitamin-D deficiency. , 1973, Lancet.
[28] J. Dungan. Maternal Vitamin D Status Determines Bone Variables in the Newborn , 2011 .
[29] Christine L. Taylor,et al. Committee to Review Dietary Reference Intakes for Vitamin D and Calcium , 2011 .
[30] C. Cooper,et al. Maternal vitamin D status during pregnancy and child outcomes , 2008, European Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
[31] C. Cooper,et al. Maternal vitamin D status during late pregnancy and accrual of childhood bone mineral , 2003 .
[32] F. Dunstan,et al. Vitamin D deficiency in pregnant women from a non-European ethnic minority population--an interventional study. , 2002, BJOG : an international journal of obstetrics and gynaecology.
[33] J. Daaboul,et al. Vitamin D deficiency in pregnant and breast-feeding women and their infants. , 1997, Journal of perinatology : official journal of the California Perinatal Association.
[34] V. Lata,et al. Effects of vitamin D supplementation in pregnancy. , 1981, Gynecologic and obstetric investigation.