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 Endocrinology...keeping you current
Receive free subspecialty "5-minute updates" via email
Individuation of different metabolic phenotypes in normal glucose tolerance test
Acta Diabetologia, 11/25/09
Are Hemoglobin Levels Elevated in Type 1 Diabetes
Diabetes Care, 11/25/09
Effects of metformin with or without supplementation with folate on homocysteine levels and vascular endothelium of women with polycystic ovary syndrome
Diabetes Care, 11/25/09

See Latest Articles