Braunschweig, C. L., Sowers, M., Kovacevich, D. S., Hill, G. M., and August, D. A. Parenteral
zinc supplementation in adult humans during the acute phase response increases the febrile response.
A controlled trial on utility of oral
zinc supplementation in acute dehydrating diarrhea in infants.
Heyland, D. K., Jones, N., Cvijanovich, N. Z., and Wong, H.
Zinc supplementation in critically ill patients: a key pharmaconutrient?
Sazawal, S., Black, R. E., Bhan, M. K., Jalla, S., Sinha, A., and Bhandari, N. Efficacy of
zinc supplementation in reducing the incidence and prevalence of acute diarrhea — a community - based, double - blind, controlled trial.
Sachdev, H. P., Mittal, N. K., and Yadav, H. S. Oral
zinc supplementation in persistent diarrhoea in infants.
Vasudevan, A., Shendurnikar, N., and Kotecha, P. V.
Zinc supplementation in severe malnutrition.
Short - term
zinc supplementation in women with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus: effects on plasma 5» - nucleotidase activities, insulin - like growth factor I concentrations, and lipoprotein oxidation rates in vitro.
Randomized, controlled trial of
zinc supplementation in malnourished Bangladeshi children with acute diarrhea.
Roy, S. K., Raqib, R., Khatun, W., Azim, T., Chowdhury, R., Fuchs, G. J., and Sack, D. A.
Zinc supplementation in the management of shigellosis in malnourished children in Bangladesh.
Boran, P., Tokuc, G., Vagas, E., Oktem, S., and Gokduman, M. K. Impact of
zinc supplementation in children with acute diarrhoea in Turkey.
Bansal, A., Parmar, V. R., Basu, S., Kaur, J., Jain, S., Saha, A., and Chawla, D.
Zinc supplementation in severe acute lower respiratory tract infection in children: a triple - blind randomized placebo controlled trial.
Hong, Z. Y., Zhang, Y. W., Xu, J. D., Zhou, J. D., Gao, X. L., Liu, X. G., and Shi, Y. Y. Growth promoting effect of
zinc supplementation in infants of high - risk pregnancies.
Oral
zinc supplementation in Down's syndrome subjects decreased infections and normalized some humoral and cellular immune parameters.
Birmingham CL, Goldner EM, Bakan R. Controlled trial of
zinc supplementation in anorexia nervosa.
Nutritional effects of oral
zinc supplementation in cirrhosis.
Al Sonboli, N., Gurgel, R. Q., Shenkin, A., Hart, C. A., and Cuevas, L. E.
Zinc supplementation in Brazilian children with acute diarrhoea.
Roussel, A. M., Kerkeni, A., Zouari, N., Mahjoub, S., Matheau, J. M., and Anderson, R. A. Antioxidant effects of
zinc supplementation in Tunisians with type 2 diabetes mellitus.
Zinc supplementation in young children with acute diarrhea in India.
A double - blind trial of
zinc supplementation in pregnancy.
A trial of
zinc supplementation in young rural Gambian children.
Prevention of diarrhea and pneumonia by
zinc supplementation in children in developing countries: pooled analysis of randomized controlled trials.
Weismann, K., Christensen, E., and Dreyer, V.
Zinc supplementation in alcoholic cirrhosis.
Franceschi, C., Chiricolo, M., Licastro, F., Zannotti, M., Masi, M., Mocchegiani, E., and Fabris, N. Oral
zinc supplementation in Down's syndrome: restoration of thymic endocrine activity and of some immune defects.
Patel, A., Mamtani, M., Dibley, M. J., Badhoniya, N., and Kulkarni, H. Therapeutic value of
zinc supplementation in acute and persistent diarrhea: a systematic review.
Dutta, P., Mitra, U., Datta, A., Niyogi, S. K., Dutta, S., Manna, B., Basak, M., Mahapatra, T. S., and Bhattacharya, S. K. Impact of
zinc supplementation in malnourished children with acute watery diarrhoea.
Hemalatha, P., Bhaskaram, P., and Khan, M. M. Role of
zinc supplementation in the rehabilitation of severely malnourished children.
Licastro, F., Mocchegiani, E., Masi, M., and Fabris, N. Modulation of the neuroendocrine system and immune functions by
zinc supplementation in children with Down's syndrome.
Failure of oral
zinc supplementation in atopic eczema.
Peretz, A., Neve, J., Jeghers, O., and Pelen, F. Zinc distribution in blood components, inflammatory status, and clinical indexes of disease activity during
zinc supplementation in inflammatory rheumatic diseases.
Bhandari, N., Bahl, R., Taneja, S., Strand, T., Molbak, K., Ulvik, R. J., Sommerfelt, H., and Bhan, M. K. Substantial reduction in severe diarrheal morbidity by daily
zinc supplementation in young north Indian children.
A community - based randomized controlled trial of iron and
zinc supplementation in Indonesian infants: effects on growth and development.
Roy, S. K., Hossain, M. J., Khatun, W., Chakraborty, B., Chowdhury, S., Begum, A., Mah - e-Muneer, Shafique, S., Khanam, M., and Chowdhury, R.
Zinc supplementation in children with cholera in Bangladesh: randomised controlled trial.
The therapeutic effect and the changed serum zinc level after
zinc supplementation in alopecia areata patients who had a low serum zinc level.
Zinc supplementation in elderly subjects produced the restoration, at least partially, of nutritional and thymic status with no adverse effects (Boukaiba et al. 1993).
In addition, results from a pooled analysis of randomized controlled trials of
zinc supplementation in developing countries suggest that zinc helps reduce the duration and severity of diarrhea in zinc - deficient or otherwise malnourished children [62].
Not exact matches
Palmer reviews the evidence
in terms of timing of solids, covering calorie, protein, iron,
zinc, fatty acid needs and more, and fnds no evidence of a need to begin any kind of
supplementation to the average exclusive breastmilk diet
in the first year of life after term birth, and beyond.
Zinc supplementation improved outcomes in the zinc - deficient m
Zinc supplementation improved outcomes
in the
zinc - deficient m
zinc - deficient mice.
«
Zinc supplementation boosts immune system
in children, review finds.»
A large - scale scientific study concluded that
zinc supplementation is effective
in treating acne.
For men specifically,
zinc and selenium are important fertility factors, and research shows selenium
supplementation can improve semen quality while
zinc plays an important role
in modulating testosterone levels.
Diarrhea
in children: Not as much of a concern
in the US, but the World Health Organization recommends
zinc supplementation for children with acute diarrhea, especially
in the developing world, as this is a leading cause of mortality
in children around the world.
In fact, one study found that 500 milligrams of spirulina daily combined with
zinc supplementation was enough to reduce arsenic toxicity by almost half!
A study published
in Obesity Surgery [1] found that
in obese patients that had lost hair due to rapid weight loss,
zinc supplementation led to not only slowing down of hair loss, but reversal too — all patients reported complete hair growth within a 6 - month period.
Effect of vitamin A and
zinc supplementation on the nutriture of children
in Northeast Thailand.
This is because
zinc supplementation above 40 mg may cause a depletion
in copper levels.
Prasad AS, Beck FW, Bao B, et al:
Zinc Supplementation Decreases Incidence of Infections
in the Elderly: Effect of
Zinc on Generation of Cytokines and Oxidative Stress.
Barnett JB, Dao MC, Hamer DH, et al: Effect of
Zinc Supplementation on Serum
Zinc Concentration and T Cell Proliferation
in Nursing Home Elderly: A Randomized, Double - Blind, Placebo - Controlled Trial.
In addition, this study found that zinc supplementation did not significantly reduce the levels of copper or HDL cholesterol in the bod
In addition, this study found that
zinc supplementation did not significantly reduce the levels of copper or HDL cholesterol
in the bod
in the body.
As well, the addition of
zinc supplementation to L - thyroxine therapy
in hypothyroid animals improved wound healing (7).
In a study of 59 post-menopausal women, the effects of calcium
supplementation (as calcium citrate, 1000 mg elemental Ca / day) with and without the addition of
zinc (15.0 mg / day), manganese (5.0 mg / day) and copper (2.5 mg / day) on the lumbar spine was evaluated over two years.