Friday, March 25, 2011

Vitamin D deficiency can cause rickets

In an infant or child this deficiency results in the disease called rickets, in which the rapidly growing bones grow soft and eventually bend under the weight of the body.

It’s a defect in the mineralization of bone matrix with increase bone mass.

Affected children lack the exposure to ultraviolet light necessary for the dermal synthesis of vitamin D and have a poor diet in vitamin D in which the component (high fiber and high cereal) probably contribute to the excessive breakdown of vitamin D.

In adults, the same disorder is called osteomalacia or adult rickets. It is to be distinguished from osteoporosis where bone mass is decreased from hypophosphatemic osteopeniaof premature infants, and from renal osteodystrophy.

The name rickets is from the Old English wrickken, to twist. The more technical medical term, rachitis, which comes from Greek, the spine , was suggested by Francis Glisson in 1650.

Vitamin D deficiency rickets occurs in underprivileged populations throughout the world, particular in the northern hemisphere.

Women in United States usually take multivitamins and eat vitamin D dairy foods so rickets and vitamin D deficiency is less a problem than in developing countries and northern Europe.
Vitamin D deficiency can cause rickets

Most Popular Articles

Articles around the world

  • Hydrocolloids — water-loving polymers such as gelatin, xanthan gum, and carrageenan — are widely used to thicken, stabilize, and texture foods, pharmaceu...
  • It could be argued that Hippocrates, the ancient Greek physician often regarded as the father of medicine, planted the first seeds of the modern soft drink...
  • Agriculture is commonly described as the purposeful raising of crops and livestock to meet human needs. The word “purposeful” is significant, as it disting...
  • Adenosine diphosphate (ADP) is a key molecule in cellular energy regulation, consisting of adenosine and two phosphate groups. It is central to the cell's ...

Feed from World of Nutrition

BannerFans.com