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bone ash

Also Known As:
toe ash; Bone, ash
Networked: 148 relevant articles (17 outcomes, 8 trials/studies)

Relationship Network

Bio-Agent Context: Research Results

Experts

1. Edwards, H M: 7 articles (08/2009 - 09/2001)
2. Pesti, G M: 4 articles (08/2009 - 05/2002)
3. Walk, C L: 2 articles (09/2021 - 01/2020)
4. Bedford, M R: 2 articles (12/2020 - 08/2006)
5. Bobeck, Elizabeth A: 2 articles (03/2016 - 01/2013)
6. Cook, Mark E: 2 articles (03/2016 - 01/2013)
7. Liem, A: 2 articles (08/2009 - 04/2008)
8. Goff, J P: 2 articles (03/2004 - 11/2000)
9. Kilburn, J: 2 articles (03/2004 - 09/2001)
10. Chun, Seong Guk: 1 article (09/2022)

Related Diseases

1. Rickets (Rachitis)
2. Body Weight (Weight, Body)
3. Weight Gain
11/01/2022 - "Maximizing bone ash requires more Ca than maximizing weight gain. "
01/01/2017 - "Dietary NPP requirements estimated based on fitted broken-line models (P < 0.0001) of the sensitive indices including daily weight gain, tibia bone strength, tibia ash percentage, tibia BMC and BMD as well as middle toe ash percentage were 0.34∼0.39%. "
01/01/2017 - "The results showed that daily weight gain, serum inorganic P, tibia bone strength, tibia ash percentage, tibia bone mineral content (BMC) and density (BMD), middle toe ash percentage, middle toe BMC and BMD were affected (P < 0.0001) by dietary NPP level, and increased linearly (P < 0.0001) and quadraticly (P < 0.004) as dietary NPP levels increased. "
07/01/1998 - "Again, chicks receiving a surfeit of D3 (1250 micrograms/kg) exhibited weight gains and bone ash values that were as great as those of chicks receiving 5, 10, 15 or 30 micrograms D3/kg. 5. It is apparent that young chicks have a high tolerance for excess D3, and chicks fed on diets that are severely deficient in available P continue to respond to D3 in excess of 37.5 micrograms/kg."
07/01/1998 - "3. With a P-adequate diet (4.5 g available P/kg) containing 8.5 g Ca/kg (assay 2), weight gain and bone ash increased linearly (P < 0.05) upon supplementing the basal diet with 0, 2.5 and 5.0 micrograms D3/kg. Higher doses of D3 did not elicit further responses, and chicks fed on a diet containing 1250 micrograms D3/kg gained as fast and had bone ash values that did not differ from those of chicks receiving 5, 10, 20 or 40 micrograms D3/kg. 4. When the maize-soyabean meal basal diet was fortified with Ca and P to achieve adequate amounts of Ca (10.1 g/kg) and P (4.5 g available P/kg) in assay 3, dietary additions produced results similar to those obtained in assay 2 where P was adequate and Ca was slightly deficient. "
4. Weight Loss (Weight Reduction)
5. Wounds and Injuries (Trauma)

Related Drugs and Biologics

1. 6-Phytase (Phytase)
2. Cholecalciferol (Vitamin D3)
3. Calcium
4. Phosphorus (Red Phosphorus)
5. Phytic Acid (Inositol Hexaphosphate)
6. Acids
7. Vitamin D
8. Biomarkers (Surrogate Marker)
9. alfacalcidol
10. Chitosan

Related Therapies and Procedures

1. Ovariectomy (Oophorectomy)