Most Viewed Abstracts
1. Report Shows Shift in Starting Salaries for Physicians 2. AHA Guidelines on Cardiac CT for Assessing Coronary Artery Disease 3. Rapid correction of low vitamin D status in nursing home residents 4. 2008 Exclusive Survey—Earnings: Good news for primary care income 5. Medicare pay-for-reporting effort draws fire from frustrated doctors
Your Article Summary
The Effect of Vitamin D2 and Vitamin D3 on Intestinal Calcium Absorption in Nigerian Children with Rickets
Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism, 07/02/09
Thacher TD et al. - Despite similar increases in 25-hydroxyvitamin D and 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D with vitamin D2 or vitamin D3, fractional calcium absorption did not increase, indicating that rickets in Nigerian children is not primarily due to vitamin D-deficient calcium malabsorption.
Related Articles
Hypophosphatemic Rickets with Hypercalciuria due to Mutation in SLC34A3/Type IIc Sodium-Phosphate Cotransporter: Presentation as Hypercalciuria and Nephrolithiasis
Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism, 10/15/09
Relevance Score: 82%
The Journey From Vitamin D-Resistant Rickets to the Regulation of Renal Phosphate Transport
Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology, 11/16/09
Relevance Score: 80%
Today in Bone Metabolism...keeping you current
Receive free subspecialty "5-minute updates" via email
Fat Mass Exerts a Greater Effect on Cortical Bone Mass in Girls than Boys
Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism, 12/17/09
Low Bone Mass and High Bone Turnover in Postmenopausal Human Immunodeficiency Virus-Infected Women
Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism, 12/17/09
Epidemiology of hip fracture in Tucuman, Argentina
Osteoporosis International, 12/17/09
Today in Pediatric Endocrinology...keeping you current
Receive free subspecialty "5-minute updates" via email
Teenage pregnancy in type 1 diabetes mellitus
Pediatric Diabetes, 12/18/09
Adolescent type 1 Diabetes cardio-renal Intervention Trial
BMC Pediatrics, 12/18/09
A novel hypomorphic PDX1 mutation responsible for Permanent Neonatal Diabetes with subclinical exocrine deficiency
Diabetes, 12/18/09
Sponsor
Article Search
Sponsor
Sponsor


See Latest Articles


