Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
Hypervitaminosis means you having too much of a certain vitamin stored in your body.
People with hypervitaminosis A have too much vitamin A.
Hypervitaminosis A, in some people who take megadoses of nutritional supplements and vitamins.
To avoid hypervitaminosis A, avoid taking more than the recommended daily allowance of this vitamin.
Many essential nutrients are toxic in large doses (see hypervitaminosis or the nutrient pages themselves below).
In children, hypervitaminosis A can cause craniotabes (abnormal softening of the skull bones).
Hypervitaminosis A occurs when the maximum limit for liver stores of retinoids is exceeded.
Very high doses of vitamin A have the potential to be toxic and can cause hypervitaminosis A, a dangerous disorder.
Other causes include Menkes kinky hair syndrome and hypervitaminosis A.
Hypervitaminosis refers to a condition of high storage levels of vitamins, which can lead to toxic symptoms.
Subclinical hypervitaminosis A causes fragile bones in rats.
Hypervitaminosis D is a state of vitamin D toxicity.
This culture-bound syndrome is possibly linked to vitamin A toxicity (hypervitaminosis A).
Hypervitaminosis A refers to the effects of excessive vitamin A (specifically retinoid) intake.
Hypervitaminosis D symptoms appear several months after excessive doses of vitamin D are administered.
Conversely hypervitaminosis is the syndrome of symptoms caused by over-retention of fat-soluble vitamins in the body.
Vitamin A toxicity There are two types of vitamin A hypervitaminosis:
The medical names of the different conditions are derived from the vitamin involved: an excess of vitamin A, for example, is called hypervitaminosis A.
These results suggest that aging-like phenotypes were due to klotho-associated vitamin D metabolic abnormalities (hypervitaminosis).
Unfortunately eating the liver of sled dogs produces the condition hypervitaminosis A because canines have a much higher tolerance for vitamin A than humans do.
While hypervitaminosis A is the generally accepted medical diagnosis for Mertz's death and Mawson's illness, the theory has its detractors.
Hypervitaminosis E may also counteract vitamin K, leading to a vitamin K deficiency.
Hypervitaminosis A and bone spurs were ruled out, and an osteoma (benign bone tumor) was deemed unlikely.
The liver of the polar bear is unsafe to eat because it is very high in vitamin A and can cause hypervitaminosis A, a dangerous disorder.
Large doses of some vitamins can lead to vitamin poisoning (hypervitaminosis), although deaths from vitamin poisoning are extremely rare in the US.