Pages that link to "Q77665318"
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The following pages link to Modifiable determinants of bone status in young women (Q77665318):
Displaying 17 items.
- Calcium supplementation for improving bone mineral density in children (Q24246305) (← links)
- Physical activity during life course and bone mass: a systematic review of methods and findings from cohort studies with young adults. (Q30537668) (← links)
- The reduction of physical activity reflects on the bone mass among young females: a follow-up study of 142 adolescent girls (Q33268635) (← links)
- Racial difference in the correlates of bone mineral content/density and age at peak among reproductive-aged women (Q33399425) (← links)
- Changes in weight, total fat, percent body fat, and central-to-peripheral fat ratio associated with injectable and oral contraceptive use (Q33785845) (← links)
- Soft tissues, areal bone mineral density and hip geometry estimates in active young boys: the PRO-BONE study. (Q36300352) (← links)
- Bone mineral accrual and low bone mass: a pediatric perspective (Q36324346) (← links)
- Vitamin d, calcium, and dairy intakes and stress fractures among female adolescents (Q36846002) (← links)
- Girls' calcium intake is associated with bone mineral content during middle childhood (Q36865036) (← links)
- Osteopenia and osteoporosis among 16-65 year old women attending outpatient clinics (Q39237825) (← links)
- Bone health in children (Q43241061) (← links)
- Hip section modulus, a measure of bending resistance, is more strongly related to reported physical activity than BMD. (Q47647301) (← links)
- Discontinuation of leisure time impact-loading exercise is related to reduction of a calcaneus quantitative ultrasound parameter in young adult Japanese females: a 3-year follow-up study (Q50800995) (← links)
- Effects of gender, anthropometric variables, and aging on the evolution of hip strength in men and women aged over 65. (Q53929865) (← links)
- Assessment of Lactose-Free Diet on the Phalangeal Bone Mineral Status in Italian Adolescents Affected by Adult-Type Hypolactasia. (Q55280606) (← links)
- Bone Mineral Content and Density in Obese, Overweight, and Normal-Weighted Sedentary Adolescent Girls (Q82538890) (← links)
- Relative importance of lean and fat mass on bone mineral density in a group of adolescent girls and boys (Q83034278) (← links)