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Journal ArticleDOI

Disordered mineral metabolism produced by ketogenic diet therapy.

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TLDR
It is suggested that ketogenic diet and anticonvulsant drug therapy have additive deleterious effects on bone mass and that these effects are partially reversible by vitamin D treatment.
Abstract
Vitamin D and mineral metabolism status was examined in five children maintained chronically on combined ketogenic diet-anticonvulsant drug therapy (KG), and the results compared to those obtained in 18 patients treated with anticonvulsant drugs alone (AD) and 15 normal controls. KG patients exhibited biochemical findings of vitamin D deficiency osteomalacia: decreased serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25OHD) and calcium concentrations, elevated serum alkaline phosphatase and parathyroid hormone concentrations, decreased urinary calcium and increased urinary hydroxyproline excretion, and decreased bone mass. Although the KG and AD groups demonstrated similar reductions in serum 25OHD concentration, the KG patients exhibited a significantly greater reduction in bone mass. In response to vitamin D supplementation (5000 IU/day), mean bone mass in the KG group increased by 8.1±0.9% (P<0.001) over a 12-month period. These results suggest that ketogenic diet and anticonvulsant drug therapy have additive deleterious effects on bone mass and that these effects are partially reversible by vitamin D treatment.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Early- and Late-onset Complications of the Ketogenic Diet for Intractable Epilepsy

TL;DR: This study was undertaken to evaluate the exact limitations of the ketogenic diet and to collect data on the prevention and management of its risks.
Journal ArticleDOI

The ketogenic diet: one decade later.

TL;DR: The ketogenic diet, a high fat, adequate protein, low carbohydrate diet, has, during the past decade, had a resurgence of interest for the treatment of difficult-to-control seizures in children.
Journal ArticleDOI

Efficacy of the Ketogenic Diet for Intractable Seizure Disorders: Review of 58 Cases

TL;DR: Improvement in patients with intractable seizures and the length of time that families maintained the regimen indicate that the ketogenic diet continues to have a very useful therapeutic role in selected patients and their families.
Journal ArticleDOI

The ketogenic diet.

TL;DR: The ketogenic diet is an efficacious and relatively safe treatment of intractable seizures, and much remains unknown about the diet, including its mechanisms of action, the optimal protocol, and the full range of its applicability.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Ketogenic Diet for Intractable Epilepsy in Adults: Preliminary Results

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors reported preliminary results in 11 adults prospectively treated with the diet who had previously failed to gain seizure control with two or more medications and/or surgery.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Competitive protein-binding radioassay for 25-hydroxycholecalciferol.

TL;DR: Rachitic kidney cytosol is employed in a simple and sensitive method for the determination of 25-hydroxycholecalciferol in human plasma, whereas lifeguards and patients with biliary cirrhosis displayed significantly higher and lower concentrations, respectively.
Journal ArticleDOI

The effects of chronic acid loads in normal man: further evidence for the participation of bone mineral in the defense against chronic metabolic acidosis.

TL;DR: The present metabolic balance studies were carried out to study further the relationship between acid retention and calcium balance during chronic ammonium chloride acidosis.
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On the pathogenesis of hyperparathyroidism in chronic experimental renal insufficiency in the dog

TL;DR: The data suggest that the control system regulating phosphate excretion contributes importantly to the pathogenesis of secondary hyperparathyroidism in advancing renal insufficiency.
Journal ArticleDOI

Osteomalacia with Long-term Anticonvulsant Therapy in Epilepsy

TL;DR: It is suggested that drug-mediated enzyme induction may be the mechanism responsible by causing a greatly increased inactivation of vitamin D in these patients with epilepsy treated with long-term anticonvulsant therapy.
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