All Stories

  1. P18-044-23 Duration of Breastfeeding and Its Relation With Ultra-Processed Products and Sweetened Beverages Intake: A Population Study in Early Childhood
  2. Calcium plus vitamin D supplementation during pregnancy reduces postpartum fat mass in adolescents: A randomized trial
  3. Salt-related practices and its association with 24-hour urinary sodium excretion in an Uruguayan population cohort
  4. Daily Intake of a Functional Synbiotic Yogurt Increases Calcium Absorption in Young Adult Women
  5. Birth weight, skeletal maturity and dietary patterns are associated with body composition compartments differently in male and female physically active adolescents
  6. Duración de lactancia materna y consumo de productos ultraprocesados y bebidas azucaradas en niños uruguayos menores de 4 años
  7. Association of Dietary Patterns with Cardiovascular and Kidney Phenotypes in an Uruguayan Population Cohort
  8. Lead exposure and indices of height and weight in Uruguayan urban school children, considering co-exposure to cadmium and arsenic, sex, iron status and dairy intake
  9. Reduction in Bone Loss from 5 to 20 Weeks Postpartum in Adolescents Supplemented with Calcium Plus Vitamin D during Pregnancy Is Not Sustained at 1 Year Postpartum: Follow-up Study of a Randomized Controlled Trial
  10. Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in yerba mate (Ilex paraguariensis) infusions and probabilistic risk assessment of exposure
  11. Calciuric Response to Acute Mate Tea Load is Inversely Associated with Habitual Mate Consumption and Dietary Caffeine in Young Adult Women
  12. Fortification of Ground Roasted Coffees with Iron, Zinc, and Calcium Salts: Evaluation of Minerals Recovery in Filtered and Espresso Brews
  13. Blood Pressure in relation to 24-Hour Urinary Sodium and Potassium Excretion in a Uruguayan Population Sample
  14. Bioimpedance parameters in adolescent athletes in relation to bone maturity and biochemical zinc indices
  15. Calcium Plus Vitamin D Supplementation During the Third Trimester of Pregnancy in Adolescents Accustomed to Low Calcium Diets Does Not Affect Infant Bone Mass at Early Lactation in a Randomized Controlled Trial1,2