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Mary E. Wlodek

Researcher at University of Melbourne

Publications -  202
Citations -  4893

Mary E. Wlodek is an academic researcher from University of Melbourne. The author has contributed to research in topics: Offspring & Pregnancy. The author has an hindex of 35, co-authored 189 publications receiving 4251 citations. Previous affiliations of Mary E. Wlodek include University of Western Australia & St. Vincent's Institute of Medical Research.

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The importance of infants' lipid intake in human milk research.

TL;DR: The purpose of this review was to provide an overview of existing methodology and demonstrate the importance of measuring infants' lipid intake to understand the impact that human milk lipids have on infant outcomes.

Fathers That Are Born Small Program Alterations in the Next-Generation

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined how paternal low birth weight affects the cellular and molecular physiology of the next-generation [second-generation (F2)] blastocysts, before uterine implantation.
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Growth restriction in the rat alters expression of cardiac JAK/STAT genes in a sex-specific manner.

TL;DR: Growth restriction alters specific targets in the JAK/STAT signalling pathway, with altered JAK2 and STAT3 potentially contributing to the increased risk of cardiovascular disease in the growth restricted males.
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Pregnant growth restricted female rats have bone gains during late gestation which contributes to second generation adolescent and adult offspring having normal bone health

TL;DR: The effects of being born small on maternal bone health during pregnancy is characterized; and the contribution of the maternal environment and germ line effects to bone health in F2 offspring from mothers born small is characterized.
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Reducing Pup Litter Size Alters Early Postnatal Calcium Homeostasis and Programs Adverse Adult Cardiovascular and Bone Health in Male Rats

TL;DR: Data suggest Reduced litter pups have dysregulated calcium homeostasis in early postnatal life, which may impair bone mineralization decreasing adult bone bending strength, and care must be taken when interpreting data from research that alters litter size as it may mask subtle cardiometabolic health effects.