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Despite widespread interest in nutrition and the public,s appetite for fresh information from health professionals, health care providers often lack accurate, clinically relevant, and current information on topics of special concern to their patients. In Clinical Nutrition of the Essential Trace Elements and Minerals: The Guide for Health Professionals, John Bogden, PhD, Leslie Klevay, MD, and a host of recognized experts address this major gap in the literature with a comprehensive, up-to-date survey of the biological roles and clinical importance of mineral and trace element nutrients. These authoritative researchers and clinicians review the clinical relevance of trace elements and minerals such as chromium, copper, fluoride, iron, iodine, molybdenum, manganese, selenium, zinc, calcium, magnesium, and phosphorus to a wide variety of medical conditions. Among the diseases treated are genetic, endocrine, skeletal, cardiovascular, kidney, gastrointestinal, infectious, surgical, and ophthalmologic disorders. The authors also discuss trace element and mineral nutrition in healthy people, with chapters on pregnancy, lactation, adolescents, and older people. Chapters on preagricultural and modern consumption patterns, epidemiology, and laboratory diagnostic tests are also included.
Timely and comprehensive, Clinical Nutrition of the Essential Trace Elements and Minerals: The Guide for Health Professionals offers today's physicians, nutritionists, and dietitians an authoritative resource replete with sound dietary and medical advice suitable for daily use with their clients and patients.
Texte du rabat
The Nutrition and Health series of books have, as an overriding mission, to provide health professionals with texts that are considered essential because each includes 1) a synthesis of the state of the science, 2) timely, in-depth reviews by the leading researchers in their respective fields, 3) extensive, up-to-date fully annotated reference lists, 4) a detailed index, 5) relevant tables and figures, 6) identification of paradigm shifts and the consequences, 7) virtually no overlap of information between chapters, but targeted, inter-chapter referrals, 8) suggestions of areas for future research, and 9) bal anced, data-driven answers to patient questions which are based upon the totality of evidence rather than the findings of any single study. The series volumes are not the outcome of a symposium. Rather, each editor has the potential to examine a chosen area with a broad perspective, both in subject matter as well as in the choice of chapter authors. The international perspective, especially with regard to public health initiatives, is emphasized where appropriate. The editors, whose trainings are both research and practice oriented, have the opportunity to develop a primary objec tive for their book; define the scope and focus, and then invite the leading authorities from around the world to be part of their initiative. The authors are encouraged to provide an overview of the field, discuss their own research and relate the research findings to potential human health consequences.
Contenu
Part I. Basic Concepts, Consumption, Deficiency, and Toxicity. The Essential Trace Elements and Minerals: Basic Concepts, John D. Bogden. Possibly Essential Trace Elements, Forrest H. Nielsen. Consumption of Trace Elements and Minerals by Preagricultural Humans, Stanley B. Eaton III and S. Boyd Eaton. Current Dietary Intakes of Trace Elements and Minerals, Jean A. T. Pennington. Laboratory Assessment of Trace Element and Mineral Status, David B. Milne. The Epidemiology of Trace Element Deficiencies, Roberto Masironi. Trace Element and Supplement Safety, John N. Hathcock. Part II. Trace Element and Mineral Nutrition in Healthy People. Trace Element and Mineral Nutrition in Human Pregnancy, Theresa O. Scholl and Thomas M. Reilly. Trace Element and Mineral Nutrition During Lactation, Mary Frances Picciano. Trace Element and Mineral Nutrition in Adolescents, Velimir Matkovic, Nancy E. Badenhop, Jasminka Z. Ilich. Trace Element Requirements in the Elderly, Ronni Chernoff. Part III. Trace Element and Mineral Nutrition in Disease. Genetic Disorders of Trace Element Metabolism, Gregory J. Anderson and Gordon D. McLaren. Trace Element and Mineral Nutrition in Endocrine Diseases, John T. Dunn. Trace Element and Mineral Nutrition in Skeletal Health and Disease, Robert P. Heaney. Trace Element and Mineral Nutrition in Ischemic Heart Disease, Leslie M. Klevay. Trace Element and Mineral Nutrition in Renal Disease, Saulo Klahr. Trace Element and Mineral Nutrition in Gastrointestinal Disease, Giacomo Carlo Sturniolo, Cinzia Mestriner, and Renata D'Incá. Immune Dysfunction in Iron, Copper, and Zinc Deficiencies, Adria R. Sherman. Trace Element and Mineral Nutrition in HIV Infection and AIDS: Implications for Host Defense, Susanna Cunningham-Rundles. Trace Element and Mineral Nutrition in Hospital, Surgical and Cancer Patients: Enteral and Parenteral Nutrition, M. A. Mohit-Tabatabai. Trace Element and Mineral Nutrition in Diseases of the Eye, George Edwin Bunce. Appendix: Journalsand Current Books. Index.