Handbook of Pediatric NutritionJones and Bartlett, 2005 - 722 pages Handbook of Pediatric Nutrition, Third Edition, provides cutting edge research and resources on the most important pediatric issues and therapies, such as prenatal nutrition, weight management, vegetarian diets, diabetes guidelines, and transplant nutrition concerns. Commonly used by dietetic practitioners studying for their Pediatric Specialty exams, registered dietitians, dietetic technicians, nutritionists, pediatricians, nurses, and dietetic students, this book is considered the last word in pediatric nutrition. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 85
Page 425
... carbohydrate will vary and is individualized based on nutri- tional assessment and treatment goals . Many fac- tors influence the glycemic response to foods , including the total amount of carbohydrate , type of carbohydrate ( glucose ...
... carbohydrate will vary and is individualized based on nutri- tional assessment and treatment goals . Many fac- tors influence the glycemic response to foods , including the total amount of carbohydrate , type of carbohydrate ( glucose ...
Page 434
... ( carbohydrate ) by matching the peak activity of insulin with the peak levels of glucose resulting from the digestion and absorption of food . With this system , only the carbohydrate value of the food is counted , which allows more ...
... ( carbohydrate ) by matching the peak activity of insulin with the peak levels of glucose resulting from the digestion and absorption of food . With this system , only the carbohydrate value of the food is counted , which allows more ...
Page 504
... carbohydrate ( glucose polymers ) or fat ( vegetable oil or medium - chain triglycerides ) . Carbohydrate and fat additives do not increase the renal solute load . However , carbohydrate addi- tives can cause a moderate increase in ...
... carbohydrate ( glucose polymers ) or fat ( vegetable oil or medium - chain triglycerides ) . Carbohydrate and fat additives do not increase the renal solute load . However , carbohydrate addi- tives can cause a moderate increase in ...
Contents
Nutritional Assessment | 11 |
Prenatal Nutrition | 35 |
Nutrition for Premature Infants | 53 |
Copyright | |
25 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Handbook of Pediatric Nutrition Patricia Queen Samour,Kathy King Helm,Carol E. Lang Limited preview - 2004 |
Common terms and phrases
adult allergy American amino acid anorexia nervosa assessment associated asthma behavior birth weight blood body bowel calcium calories carbohydrate chil child chronic Clin Nutr clinical cystic fibrosis decreased deficiency diabetes diarrhea Diet Assoc dietary Dietary Reference Intakes disease dose dren eating disorders effects energy enteral feedings enteral nutrition evaluation failure to thrive fatty acids fluid gastrointestinal gestational glucose guidelines increased infant formula infants and children insulin intake iron kcal L-carnitine levels lipid meal metabolic mineral monitoring ND ND needs neonatal normal nutrient nutrition support nutritional status obesity oral overweight parenteral nutrition parents patients Pediatr percentile physical activity plasma pregnancy premature infants preterm protein recommended renal require risk serum sodium Source supplementation symptoms syndrome Table therapy tion treatment trition tube feeding vegetarian vitamin vitamin B12 vitamin D weight gain zinc
References to this book
Pediatric Nephrology and Urology: The Requisites in Pediatrics Bernard S. Kaplan,Kevin E. C. Meyers No preview available - 2004 |