A study in the rat of the interaction between the effects of calcium and phosphorus content of the diet at two different levels and the presence or absence of vitamin D
- 1 February 1966
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in British Journal of Nutrition
- Vol. 20 (1) , 55-60
- https://doi.org/10.1079/bjn19660007
Abstract
1. Four groups of weanling rats were maintained on diets containing either 0.12% or 0.24% of both calcium and phosphorus, in the presence and absence of added ergocalciferol. 2. Increase in mineral intake or the provision of vitamin D increased the final body-weight, with a significant interaction between the two factors. 3. Serum Ca and P concentrations were raised significantly by both the vitamin and the increase in mineral intake without signi ficant interaction. 4. Measurements were made of bone and tooth weights and ash values and of the length of the humeri. For only two measurements was there any interaction between the effect of vitamin D and increase in mineral intake, namely the length of the humeri, and their ash values expressed as a percentage of the dry fat-free weight. 5. It is concluded that in relation to the amount of mineral deposited, the incisor tooth is more resistant to nutritional stress than is the bone.This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Citrate in mineralized tissues—VIIArchives of Oral Biology, 1964
- The effect of vitamin D on the dentine of the incisor teeth and on the alveolar bone of young rats maintained on diets deficient in calcium or phosphorusArchives of Oral Biology, 1964
- Citrate in mineralized tissues—VIArchives of Oral Biology, 1963
- The effect of vitamin D on the bones of young rats receiving diets low in calcium or phosphorusArchives of Oral Biology, 1963
- Citrate in mineralized tissues—IIIArchives of Oral Biology, 1961
- The action of vitamin d upon the incisor teeth of rats consuming diets with a high or low ca:p ratioThe Journal of Physiology, 1944