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2009

Nutrition

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Articles 1 - 21 of 21

Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences

Food For Thought: The Importance Of Nutrition For Cognitive And Physical Well-Being, Keeley M. Caviness Nov 2009

Food For Thought: The Importance Of Nutrition For Cognitive And Physical Well-Being, Keeley M. Caviness

Senior Honors Theses

The purpose of this paper is to examine the effects of nutrition upon the physical development and health of an individual. The main focus is on proving through the examination of various literature and the effects of specific nutrients that nutrition has a great impact on mental and physical well-being. The reasons which people give for not having proper nutrition are taken into consideration as well, and an overall conclusion can be made that nutrition is very important and should be taught to all consumers.


Healthy Weight Projects, Jane Gervasio Oct 2009

Healthy Weight Projects, Jane Gervasio

Jane M. Gervasio

No abstract provided.


Hss Alumni News Fall 2009, Department Of Health And Sport Sciences Oct 2009

Hss Alumni News Fall 2009, Department Of Health And Sport Sciences

Health and Sport Sciences Newsletter

  • Moving Forward and Remembering Where I Have Been by Mike Ruffing
  • Health Promotion & Fitness Gets Human Performance Lab
  • Dr. Kathy Krendl Named 20th President of Otterbein College
  • Joan Rocks - Master Teacher of the Year 2009
  • Message from the Chair


Hss Departmental Developments Fall 2009, Department Of Health And Sport Sciences Oct 2009

Hss Departmental Developments Fall 2009, Department Of Health And Sport Sciences

Health and Sport Sciences Newsletter

  • Joan Rocks - Master Teacher of the Year 2009
  • Human Performance Lab
  • OtterFit
  • Updates from the Majors


Nutrition Support Therapy In Acute Kidney Injury: Distinguishing Dogma From Good Practice, Jane M. Gervasio, Ann B. Cotton Aug 2009

Nutrition Support Therapy In Acute Kidney Injury: Distinguishing Dogma From Good Practice, Jane M. Gervasio, Ann B. Cotton

Scholarship and Professional Work – COPHS

Acute kidney injury (AKI) is a frequently observed complication in critically ill patients. Its presentation may range from the early risk of renal dysfunction to complete renal failure. Morbidity and mortality in the AKI patient increase with the decline of renal function. Appropriate nutrition therapy is essential in the medical management of the AKI patient. Assessment of nutritional requirements should take into account the patient’s underlying complication, comorbid medical conditions, and severity of the renal dysfunction. Various stages of AKI determine the direction of nutrition therapy. Additionally, understanding the macro- and micronutrient modifications and electrolyte and vitamin alterations that should …


Food Exemplar Salience: What Foods Do People Think Of When You Tell Them To Change Their Diet?, Carolyn R. Brown-Kramer, Marc T. Kiviniemi, Julie A. Winseman Jun 2009

Food Exemplar Salience: What Foods Do People Think Of When You Tell Them To Change Their Diet?, Carolyn R. Brown-Kramer, Marc T. Kiviniemi, Julie A. Winseman

Department of Psychology: Faculty Publications

Understanding which specific foods easily come to mind when individuals consider categories of dietary behavior may help explain observed patterns of dietary intake. We examined which specific behavioral exemplars are most easily retrieved from memory when individuals consider broad dietary categories. Participants reported specific foods that come to mind when considering high fat foods, low fat foods, and fruits/vegetables. Salient foods differed from those suggested in dietary guidelines, were distinct from those known to be major diet components, and showed a non-trivial number of incorrect responses. These findings have implications for understanding how individuals respond to dietary guidelines and devising …


Survey Of Adult Cystic Fibrosis Patients And Parents Of Cystic Fibrosis Patients On Nutrition Education, Dixie Lea Durham May 2009

Survey Of Adult Cystic Fibrosis Patients And Parents Of Cystic Fibrosis Patients On Nutrition Education, Dixie Lea Durham

Boise State University Theses and Dissertations

Cystic fibrosis (CF) is an inherited disorder affecting more than 30,000 Americans, primarily Caucasians (CF Foundation, n.d.a). A defective gene on the seventh chromosome is inherited from the mother and the father. This gene causes the body to produce an abnormal protein that leads to thick, sticky mucus that is secreted by the lungs, pancreas, liver, sweat glands, and reproductive organs. The pancreas normally excretes enzymes that aid in the digestion of food, however this function is impaired in CF, and therefore CF patients must ingest replacement enzymes (CF Foundation, n.d.a). Despite advances in treatment, including replacement enzymes, under-nutrition and …


Hss Departmental Developments Spring 2009, Department Of Health And Sport Sciences Apr 2009

Hss Departmental Developments Spring 2009, Department Of Health And Sport Sciences

Health and Sport Sciences Newsletter

  • Sport Management Conference Report
  • Updates from the Majors


A Comparison Of The Efficacy Of 0.5 Units/Ml Versus 1 Unit/Ml Of Heparin In Neonatal Parenteral Nutrition, E. Szeszycki, A. Kastner, L. Mobley, Jane Gervasio Jan 2009

A Comparison Of The Efficacy Of 0.5 Units/Ml Versus 1 Unit/Ml Of Heparin In Neonatal Parenteral Nutrition, E. Szeszycki, A. Kastner, L. Mobley, Jane Gervasio

Jane M. Gervasio

Abstract of distinction from ASPEN Nutrition Week, New Orleans, LA, February 1-4, 2009.


Vitamin D Status Among Bangladeshi Women Of Reproductive Age, Ann Micka Jan 2009

Vitamin D Status Among Bangladeshi Women Of Reproductive Age, Ann Micka

Masters Theses 1911 - February 2014

Vitamin D deficiency is of particular concern among women in many south Asian countries due to low availability of vitamin D-rich foods, dark skin pigmentation, and cultural and religious practices that promote the wearing of concealing clothing. However, information regarding the vitamin D status of many subpopulations in south Asian countries is limited. The current study was conducted to assess the vitamin D status of 147 Bangladeshi women of reproductive age and determine whether vitamin D status influences susceptibility to arsenic-associated skin lesions (75 cases, 72 controls). Serum 25(OH)D3 levels were measured using a radioimmunoassay. The mean serum vitamin D …


Association Between Serum Ferritin And Body Composition In Young Women, Ujjwala S. Dandekar Jan 2009

Association Between Serum Ferritin And Body Composition In Young Women, Ujjwala S. Dandekar

Masters Theses 1911 - February 2014

No abstract provided.


Group Feeding For The Lactating Cow, Anthony Joseph Martin Jan 2009

Group Feeding For The Lactating Cow, Anthony Joseph Martin

Dairy Science

Feeding individualized rations for lactating dairy cattle in the commercial herd based on dietary needs is a popular issue. This has been a debating topic since evolution of the Total Mixed Ration (TMR). Since dairymen were able to mix grain in a feed wagon and mix a specific dietary ration to meet the demand for an organized group, there has been an issue in which protocol cow pen grouping should take. Dairymen have always feed cattle based on if lactating or late in their gestation, nonlactating. With the evolution of the TMR dairymen are then allowed to go into more …


Nutritional Needs Of The Recreational Athlete, Kathleen M. Laquale Jan 2009

Nutritional Needs Of The Recreational Athlete, Kathleen M. Laquale

Movement Arts, Health Promotion and Leisure Studies Faculty Publications

The article looks at the the nutritional requirements for recreational athletes. The author discusses the differences between recreational and competitive athletes. Requirements for energy intake are reviewed. The need for maintaining proper hydration and electrolyte levels is also noted. Differences in protein requirements for weightlifters and endurance athletes are discussed.


Hss Departmental Developments Winter 2009, Department Of Health And Sport Sciences Jan 2009

Hss Departmental Developments Winter 2009, Department Of Health And Sport Sciences

Health and Sport Sciences Newsletter

  • A Shot of Health Annual Health Fair
  • Updates from the Majors


Nutrition-Spinal Cord Injury Manual, Thomas Jefferson University Hospital And Magee Rehabilitation Jan 2009

Nutrition-Spinal Cord Injury Manual, Thomas Jefferson University Hospital And Magee Rehabilitation

Spinal Cord Injury Manual (English)

Introduction-Why Nutrition Matters

Nutrition is important for everyone to maintain good health. After a spinal cord injury, nutrition can be even more important to improve overall wellness, achieve and maintain a healthy weight and help regulate bowel and bladder function. Eating a well balanced diet can help prevent the long term complications associated with SCI such as weight gain, deconditioning and skin breakdown.

A well-balanced diet can provide all of the nutrients that your body needs. Foods high in fiber, along with plenty of water, help regulate bowel function. However, if you eat more than you need, you can gain …


Editorial: Nutrition Research Reviews, Katherine Younger Jan 2009

Editorial: Nutrition Research Reviews, Katherine Younger

Articles

Cognitive performance in children and whether this can be improved by nutritional means is an area of investigation fraught with experimental challenges, making it difficult to draw useful conclusions. Hoyland et al. (1) have here provided a much-needed systematic review of the evidence on the specific question of the effects of breakfast on children’s cognitive performance and, unsurprisingly, have concluded that the effects are generally positive, most clearly shown for memory and attention tasks and most easily demonstrated in nutritionally vulnerable children. However, the benefits of food before schoolwork are not necessarily purely, or even mostly, physiological; they could be …


Action Or Inaction? Food And Nutrition In Australian Local Governments, Heather Yeatman Jan 2009

Action Or Inaction? Food And Nutrition In Australian Local Governments, Heather Yeatman

Faculty of Health and Behavioural Sciences - Papers (Archive)

Objective: To determine the current level of activity of Australian local governments in twenty-nine food and nutrition action areas and whether the level of activity had changed between 1995 and 2007.Design: A cross-sectional study utilising a postal survey was undertaken of all local governments in Australia. The same instrument and protocol were used in 1995 and 2007.Setting: Australian local governments.Results: Local governments in Australia continue to be engaged in food and nutrition activities. This involvement has constricted in range in the last 12 years but higher levels of engagement are reported for several areas. The levels of involvement of local …


Smoke And Mirrors: Nutrition Content Claims Used To Market Unhealthy Food, Bridget Kelly, Libby Hattersley, Lesley King, Vicki Flood Jan 2009

Smoke And Mirrors: Nutrition Content Claims Used To Market Unhealthy Food, Bridget Kelly, Libby Hattersley, Lesley King, Vicki Flood

Faculty of Health and Behavioural Sciences - Papers (Archive)

Nutrition content claims are statements that relate to the presence or absence of nutrients, energy or biologically active substances in food. Currently in Australia, food manufacturers are permitted to make nutrition content claims as long as they can substantiate that the food component is present at the claimed levels, that is, that the claim is honest and true. Nutrition content claims can be used by food manufacturers to market food products, whereby positive nutritional attributes are emphasised to exaggerate the nutritional quality or health benefit of the product. In this way, nutrition-related claims can be misleading, with manufacturers able to …


Editorial: Nutrition Research Reviews, Katherine Younger Jan 2009

Editorial: Nutrition Research Reviews, Katherine Younger

Articles

The diverse nature of the reviews included in this issue of Nutrition Research Reviews highlights a problem that is becoming increasingly acute for journal editors, namely that of finding suitable reviewers (especially for the more esoteric manuscripts) who are prepared to devote some of their time and expertise to this crucial task. Peer-review underpins the whole ethos of scientific journal publishing as we currently know it. Without it, readers have little guarantee that the published material is credible, which in turn casts the authors in a dubious light, and with them the editors and publishers of the journals; the whole …


Project L.E.A.N.: An After-School Health And Exercise Project For Elementary School Children In El Paso, Texas, Hendrik De Heer Jan 2009

Project L.E.A.N.: An After-School Health And Exercise Project For Elementary School Children In El Paso, Texas, Hendrik De Heer

Open Access Theses & Dissertations

INTRODUCTION: After-school activities provide valuable opportunities for health promotion activities that do not interfere with the regular school day, especially in minority populations with higher rates of obesity and type 2 diabetes. The current study is an evaluation of an after-school health education and physical activity program conducted in nine elementary schools in 2008 in El Paso, Texas. METHODS: The intervention consisted of a 10-12 week (twice a week) after school program consisting of a pilot (with two experimental schools) and main intervention (six schools each including a control and experimental group). The main outcome variables were Body Mass Index, …


Clinico-Pathologic Characteristics And Treatment Outcomes In Children With Neuroblastoma At The Kenyatta National Hospital, Nairobi., Grace Kitonyi, William Macharia, Otieno Walter Mwanda, R. Pamnani Jan 2009

Clinico-Pathologic Characteristics And Treatment Outcomes In Children With Neuroblastoma At The Kenyatta National Hospital, Nairobi., Grace Kitonyi, William Macharia, Otieno Walter Mwanda, R. Pamnani

Paediatrics and Child Health, East Africa

Objective: To determine clinical-pathologic characteristics, treatment modalities and treatment outcomes of children diagnosed with neuroblastoma.

Design: Cross- sectional descriptive study based on secondary data from patient records.

Setting: Records department of Kenyatta National Hospital (KNH), a tertiary teaching and referral hospital based in Nairobi.

Subjects: Children aged 15 years and below, admitted with the diagnosis of neuroblastoma, between January 1997 and December 2005.

Main outcome measures: Presenting clinical features, diagnostic modalities including laboratory and imaging data, treatment modalities, response to treatment and patient survival.

Results: Twenty six patients were eligible for the study; 13 males and 13 females giving a …