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1.
Indian Pediatr ; 2019 Jan; 56(1): 23-28
Article | IMSEAR | ID: sea-199285

Résumé

Objective: To assess height velocity and develop height velocitypercentiles in 5-17-year-old Indian children; and to study themagnitude and age at peak height velocity.Design: Mixed longitudinal study.Setting: Private schools at Pune and Delhi.Participants/patients: 2949 children (1681 boys) belonging toaffluent class aged 5-17 years (1473-Pune, 1476-Delhi).Methods: Annual height and weight measurements from 2007 to2013. Total 13214 height velocity measurements (7724 on boys).Outcome Measures: Height velocity percentiles (3rd, 10th, 25th,50th, 75th, 90th and 97th) constructed using LMS chart maker.Results: Age- and gender-specific height velocity percentileswere generated. Median height velocity in girls decreased from 5to 8 years, increased to a peak of 6.6 cm at 10.5 years and thendeclined to 0.3 cm at 17.5 years. In boys, median height velocityreduced till 10.5, increased to a peak of 6.8 cms at 13.5 years andthen declined to 1cm by 18 years.Conclusions: Height velocity percentiles in 5-17-year-old urbanIndian children were constructed

2.
Indian Pediatr ; 2016 May; 53(5): 434-435
Article Dans Anglais | IMSEAR | ID: sea-179019

Résumé

To explore association of dietary-calcium intake and body-composition with blood-pressure, 417 apparently healthy adolescents (218 boys) were studied for anthropometry, blood pressure, body composition and nutrient intakes using standard protocols. Blood pressure correlated negatively with dietary calcium (r= -0.120, P<0.01) and positively with body fat (r=0.56,P<0.001). Low dietary-calcium intakes and high adiposity may increase risk of hypertension in Indian adolescents.

3.
Article Dans Anglais | IMSEAR | ID: sea-147682
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