B.C. Pallo, L. Schnaas, A. DiGirolamo, R. Garcia Feregrino,
D.A. Quezada, W. Hao, L. Neufeld, A.D. Stein, J.A. Rivera and
R. Martorell. Emory Univ., Natl. Inst. of Publ. Hlth, Cuernavaca,
CARE, Atlanta and Micronutrient Initiative, Ottawa.
10:45
355.2
Iron biofortified pearl millet improves iron
status in Indian school children: results of a feeding trial.
J.D.
Haas, J.L. Finkelstein, S.A. Udipi, P. Ghugre and S. Mehta.
Cornell Univ. and SNDT Women’s Univ., Mumbai.
11:00
355.3
Iron stores and home stimulation independently
relate to infant development in a rural Indian community with
high rates of infant anemia.
S. Fernandez Rao, M. Black,
K. Hurley, N. Balakrishna, K.Y. Radhakrishna, N. Tilton,
G. Reinhart, K. Harding and K.M. Nair. Natl. Inst. of Nutr.,
Hyderabad, India, Univ. of Maryland Baltimore, Mathile Inst.,
Dayton and Micronutrient Initiative, Ottawa.
TUESDAY NUTRITION
96
11:15
355.4
Post-infant linear growth is associated with
cognitive achievement of 8-year-olds in Ethiopia, India, Peru
and Vietnam.
B.T. Crookston, W. Schott, K.A. Dearden, S.
Cueto, P. Engle, A. Georgiadis, E.A. Lundeen, M.E. Penny,
A. Stein and J.R. Behrman. Brigham Young Univ., Univ. of
Pennsylvania, Boston Univ. & Helen Keller Intl., Kathmandu,
GRADE, Lima, Peru, Cal Poly State, San Luis Obispo, Univ. of
Oxford, Emory Univ. and Nutr. Res. Inst., Lima, Peru.
11:30
355.5
Child growth from age 1 to age 8 years in
four low- and middle-income countries: young lives.
E.A.
Lundeen, J. Behrman, B. Crookston, K. Dearden, P. Engle,
A. Georgiadis, M. Penny and A. Stein. Emory Univ., Univ. of
Pennsylvania, Brigham Young Univ., Boston Univ. and Helen
Keller Intl., Kathmandu, Cal Poly State Univ., San Luis Obispo,
Young Lives Study, Oxford and Nutr. Res. Inst., Lima, Peru.
11:45
355.6
Growth of poor rural Chinese children fed meat
as a daily complementary food from 6-18 months of age.
K.M.
Hambidge, X. Sheng, J. Westcott, Q-Q. Sun, Y-Q. Hu, J-R.
Liu, S-S. Liu, J. Zhang, J-Q. Ma, S-S. Geng and N.F. Krebs.
Univ. of Colorado Sch. of Med. and Shanghai Jiao Tong Univ.
Sch. of Med.
12:00
355.7
Higher cognitive and gross motor scores
in Chinese toddlers randomized to meat compared to either
micro-nutrient fortified or unfortified infant cereal as first
complementary food.
N.F. Krebs, X. Sheng, J.E. Westcott,
Y-Q. Hu, S-S. Liu and K.M. Hambidge. Univ. of Colorado Sch.
of Med. and Shanghai Jiao Tong Univ. Sch. of Med., China.
12:15
355.8
Chronic immune activation in Zimbabwean
infants mediates the influence of clinical morbidity on child
growth.
A.D. Jones, A.J. Prendergast, S. Rukobo, B.
Chasekwa, K. Mutasa, R. Ntozini, M.N.N. Mduduzi, R.J.
Stoltzfus and J.H. Humphrey. Cornell Univ., Queen Mary
Univ. of London,
Zvitambo Proj., Harare, Zimbabwe and Johns
Hopkins Bloomberg Sch. of Publ. Hlth.
356. ANIMAL RESEARCH MODELS INVESTIGATING
NUTRITION AND INFLAMMATION
Minisymposium
(Sponsored by: Experimental Animal Nutrition RIS)
t
ue
. 10:30
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 153B
C
haired
: K. a
JuWon
C
oChaired
: n. G
aBler
10:30
356.1
A diet high in saturated fat and low in calcium
is more detrimental to bone health of male Wistar rats than a
fructose-rich diet.
L.M. Castelli, P.M. Miotto, W.R. Bruce and
W.E. Ward. Brock Univ., ON and Univ. of Toronto.
10:45
356.2
Diet composition but not rat source affects
bone quantity and strength in rats with subclinical inflammation.
P.M. Miotto, L.M. Castelli, W.R. Bruce and W.E. Ward. Brock
Univ., ON and Univ. of Toronto.
11:00
356.3
Lycopene upregulates mRNA expressions of
SIRT1 and adiponectin and downregulates PPAR
g and IL-6 in
adipose tissue of hypercaloric diet-fed rats.
R.A.M. Luvizotto,
A.F. Nascimento, N.C.M. Miranda, D.T. Pierine, E. Imaizumi,
P.T. Presti, C.R. Correa, K-J. Yeum, X-D. Wang and A.L.A.
Ferreira. UNESP, Botucatu, Brazil and USDA at TUFTS Univ.
11:15
356.4
Retinoid derivatives offer anti-inflammatory
benefits by promoting neutrophil apoptosis and inhibiting
pro-inflammatory mediator production in a model of bovine
respiratory disease.
S. Duquette, C.D. Fischer, T.D. Feener,
D.R. Barreda, D.W. Morck, J. Nickerson and A.G. Buret.
Univ. of Calgary, Univ. of Alberta and NRC Inst. for Nutrisci. and
Hlth., Charlottetown, Canada.
11:30
356.5
Influence of dietary saturated fat content on
adiposity, macrophage behavior, inflammation, and metabolism:
composition matters.
R. Enos, J.M. Davis, K. Velazquez, J.
McClellan, K. Carnevale and E.A. Murphy. Sch. of Med., Univ.
of South Carolina, Univ. of South Carolina-Upstate and Des
Moines Univ.
11:45
356.6
Cysteinyl-glycine reduces mucosal pro-
inflammatory cytokine response to fMLP in a piglet model of
intestinal atrophy.
M. Nosworthy and J.A. Brunton. Mem.
Univ. of Newfoundland, Canada.
12:00
356.7
The effects of heat stress and Zn intake on the
microbial communities in the stomach, ileum, colon and feces
of pigs.
K.M. Hunt, S.L. Brooker, M.V. Sanz-Fernandez, N.K.
Gabler, L.H. Baumgard and M.A. McGuire. Univ. of Idaho and
Iowa State Univ.
12:15
356.8
Effects of heat stress on the response to
metabolic challenges in growing pigs.
M.V. Sanz Fernandez,
J.S. Johnson, M. Abuajamieh, S.K. Stoakes, S.M. Lei, A.L.
Gabler, M. Zucato Toledo, R.P. Rhoads and L.H. Baumgard.
Iowa State Univ. and VPI and State Univ.
357. NUTRITION, INFECTION AND IMMUNITY
Minisymposium
(Sponsored by: Nutritional Immunology RIS)
t
ue
. 10:30
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 153C
C
haired
: s.r. s
haiKh
C
oChaired
: m. B
eCK
10:30
357.1
Early intestinal colonization phenotypes predict
necrotizing enterocolitis in preterm infants.
A.L. Morrow, A.J.
Lagomarcino, K.R. Schibler, D.H. Taft, Z. Yu, B. Wang, D.
Gevers, D.V. Ward, M.A. Kennedy, C. Huttenhower and D.S.
Newburg. Cincinnati Children’s Hosp. and Med. Ctr., Univ. of
Cincinnati, Boston Col., Miami Univ., Broad Inst., Cambridge,
MA and Harvard Sch. of Publ. Hlth.
10:45
357.2
Dietary wolfberry supplementation enhances
protective effect of flu vaccine against influenza infection in
aged mice.
X. Du, J. Wang, X. Niu, D. Smith, K. Vidal, D. Wu
and S.N. Meydani. USDA at Tufts Univ. and Nestlé Res. Ctr.,
Lausanne.
11:00
357.3
Diet-induced obese mice exhibit heightened
lung inflammatory and cross-reactive CD8 T cell responses
during a secondary 2009 pandemic H1N1 influenza infection.
J.J. Milner, P.A. Sheridan, E.A. Karlsson, S. Schultz-Cherry,
Q. Shi and M.A. Beck. Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
and St. Jude Children’s Res. Hosp.
11:15
357.4
Old-onset energy restriction is detrimental to
NK cell maturation.
B.E. Roman, J. Clinthorne, D. Duriancik
and E.M. Gardner. Michigan State Univ.
11:30
357.5
Vitamin E reverses age-associated
susceptibility to Streptococcus pneumoniae lung infection.
E.
Bou Ghanem, X. Du, D. Wu, A. Camilli, J. Leong and S.N.
Meydani. USDA at Tufts Univ. and HHMI.
NUTRITION TUESDAY
97
T
U
E
11:45
357.6
Effects of iron deficiency on the production of
pro-inflammatory cytokines in 8- to 12-year-old children.
L.A.
García-Miranda, J.A. Estrada, V. Paredes-Cervantes and I.
Contreras. Fac. of Med., Autonomous Univ. of Mexico State
and Natl. Med. Ctr. Siglo XXI, Mexican Social Security Inst.
12:00
357.7
Vitamin D regulates cross talk between
epithelial cells and immune cells through the secretion of
CD14.
K. Simmons and J. Welsh. Univ. at Albany.
12:15
357.8
Soil-transmitted helminthic infection and
nutritional status among urban slum children in Kenya.
P.S.
Suchdev, S. Davis, L. Ruth, C. Worrell, R. Wiegand, J.M.
Montgomery and L. Foxe. Emory Univ. and Ctrs. for Dis.
Control and Prevent.
358. MICRONUTRIENT BIOAVAILABILITY,
FUNCTIONS AND INTERVENTIONS
Minisymposium
(Sponsored by: Vitamins and Minerals RIS)
t
ue
. 10:30
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 154
C
haired
: m.G. t
raBer
C
oChaired
: C.J. C
iFelli
10:30
358.1
Vitamin D supplementation in healthy
adolescents does not increase calcium absorption.
K.M. Hill,
B.R. Martin, E.M. Laing, D.B. Hausman, D.B. Hall, L.D.
McCabe, G.P. McCabe, M. Peacock, R.D. Lewis and C.M.
Weaver. Indiana Univ., Indianapolis, Purdue Univ. and Univ. of
Georgia.
10:45
358.2
Calcium retention in Mexican American
adolescents on a range of controlled calcium intakes.
C.
Palacios, B.R. Martin, G.P. McCabe, L. McCabe, M. Peacock
and C.M. Weaver. Med. Sci. Campus, Univ. of Puerto Rico,
Purdue Univ. and Indiana Univ. Sch. of Med.
11:00
358.3
Novel metabolic and non-metabolic
mechanisms influencing bioavailability of vitamin E.
S.
Bardowell, X.X. Ding and R. Parker. Cornell Univ., NYS Dept.
of Hlth., Albany and Sch. of Publ. Hlth., Univ. at Albany, SUNY.
11:15
358.4
Seed coat removal of red lentils enhances iron
bioavailability in traditional Bangladeshi meals.
D.M. DellaValle,
A. Vandenberg and R.P. Glahn. USDA, Ithaca and Univ. of
Saskatchewan.
11:30
358.5
Estimating iron bioavailability from the U.S.
diet.
S.M. Armah, A. Carriquiry and M.B. Reddy. Iowa State
Univ.
11:45
358.6
Efficacy of antenatal multiple micronutrient
versus iron-folic acid supplementation in improving gestational
and postnatal viability in rural Bangladesh: The JiVita-3 Trial.
K.P. West, Jr., A.A. Shamim, A.B. Labrique, H. Ali, S. Shaikh,
S. Mehra, K.J. Schulze, R.D.W. Klemm, L.S-F. Wu, R.D.
Merrill, A. Massie, J. Katz and P. Christian. Johns Hopkins
Bloomberg Sch. of Publ. Hlth. and The JiVita-3 Trial, JHU in
Bangladesh.
12:00
358.7
Maternal anemia modifies the effect of multiple
micronutrient supplementation on birth weight and infant
mortality in Indonesia.
S.K. Sebayang, M. Pierce, B. Harefa,
A. Aditiawarman, M.S. Apriatni, A.V. Shankar, M. Dibley, P.J.
Kelly, R. Tjiong, K. Anwar and A.H. Shankar. SUMMIT Inst.
of Develop., Indonesia, Johns Hopkins Univ. Bloomberg Sch.
of Publ. Hlth., Univ. of Sydney Sch. of Publ. Hlth., Helen Keller
Intl. – Indonesia, Jakarta, West Nusa Tenggara Provincial Hlth.
Dept., Indonesia and Harvard Sch. of Publ. Hlth.
12:15
358.8
Bioavailability of folic acid and l-5-
methyltetrahydrofolic acid in fortified bread: a randomized
placebo-controlled trial.
W. Li, T.J. Green, D.D. Kitts, Y. Liu, R.
Böhni and S. Dadgar. Univ. of British Columbia and Merck &
Cie, Switzerland.
359. CARDIOVASCULAR EFFECTS OF DIETARY
BIOACTIVE COMPONENTS
Minisymposium
(Sponsored by: Dietary Bioactive Components RIS)
t
ue
. 10:30
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 156a
C
haired
: t. J
alili
C
oChaired
: J.D. s
ymons
10:30
359.1
Curcumin modulation of atherosclerosis and
hepatosteatosis in LDLr
-/-
mice.
S.T. Hasan, J-M. Zingg, T.
Noble, P. Kwan, D. Smith and M. Meydani. USDA at Tufts
Univ. and Tufts Univ. Med. Sch.
10:45
359.2
Anti-atherogenic effect of blue-green algae in
male apolipoprotein E knockout mice fed an atherogenic diet.
C.S. Ku, B. Kim, T. Pham, C.J. Wegner, Y. Yang, Y. Park and J.
Lee. Univ. of Connecticut.
11:00
359.3
Cocoa consumption dose-dependently
improves flow-mediated dilation and arterial stiffness in healthy
subjects.
D. Grassi, G. Desideri, S. Necozione, P. Di Giosia,
P. Cheli, R. Barnabei, L. Allegaert, H. Bernaert and C. Ferri.
Univ. of L’Aquila, Italy and Barry Callebaut, Belgium.
11:15
359.4
Effect of grape seed extract delivered
in a beverage on blood pressure in individuals with pre-
hypertension.
E. Park, B. Wuchner, Y. Huang, S. Joseph, I.
Edirisinghe and B. Burton-Freeman. Illinois Inst. of Technol.
11:30
359.5
Arterial compliance in response to a single
meal rich in long-chain omega-3 fatty acids.
J.M. McKenzie, C.
Banks and I. Gow. Queen Margaret Univ., U.K.
11:45
359.6
Acute administration of n-3 triglyceride emulsion
provides marked cardioprotection after ischemia/reperfusion.
H. Zirpoli, M. Abdillahi, N. Quadri, R. Ananthakrishnan, Z.
Zhu, L. Wang, Q. Li, R.J. Deckelbaum and R. Ramasamy.
Columbia Univ. Med. Ctr. and NYU Med. Ctr.
12:00
359.7
Effect of tart cherry versus PPAR agonist
pioglitazone on stroke-related phenotypes and inflammation.
E.M. Seymour, J. Wolforth, K. Bosak, M. Kondoleon, V.
Mehta, P. Brickner and S.F. Bolling. Univ. of Michigan Hlth.
Syst.
12:15
359.8
Cranberry juice cocktail consumers have
healthier cardio-metabolic profiles.
K. Duffey, L.A. Sutherland
and C. Khoo. Univ. of North Carolina, LA Sutherland Gp. LLC,
NH and Ocean Spray Cranberries Inc., MA.
TUESDAY NUTRITION
98
360. OBESITY: BODY COMPOSITION
Minisymposium
(Sponsored by: Obesity RIS)
t
ue
. 10:30
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 156B
C
haired
: s. h
eymsFielD
C
oChaired
: J. K
ehayais
10:30
360.1
Restricted diet benefits body composition but
deteriorates bone remodeling in middle-aged obese female
rats.
C-L. Shen, R.Y. Dagda and M-C. Chyu. Texas Tech Univ.
Hlth. Sci. Ctr.
10:45
360.2
Relationships between body roundness with
body fat and visceral adipose tissue emerging from a new
geometrical model.
D.M. Thomas, C. Bredlau, A. Bosy-
Westphal, M. Müller, W. Shen, D. Gallagher, Y. Maeda, A.
McDougall, C. Peterson, E. Ravussin and S.B. Heymsfield.
Montclair State Univ., Christian Albrechts Univ. Kiel, St. Luke’s-
Roosevelt Hosp., NY and Pennington Biomed. Res. Ctr., Baton
Rouge.
11:00
360.3
Relationship of plasma levels of C-reactive
protein and adiponectin and change of lean body mass in
obese postmenopausal women supplemented with safflower
oil.
R.M. Cole, R. Andridge and M.A. Belury. The Ohio State
Univ.
11:15
360.4
Central adiposity predicts hippocampal-
dependent relational memory in prepubertal children.
N.A.
Khan, C.L. Baym, L.B. Raine, E. Drollette, M. Scudder,
A.F. Kramer, N.J. Cohen and C.H. Hillman. Univ. of Illinois,
Urbana.
11:30
360.5
Fat-soluble vitamin status in response to non-
surgical weight loss in overweight post-menopausal women.
M.
Prokopy, S.L. Booth, E. Saltzman, K-J. Yeum, B. Nicklas and
M.K. Shea. Tufts Univ., Boston and Wake Forest Univ.
11:45
360.6
Dynamic model predicting overweight, obesity,
and extreme obesity prevalence trends.
D.M. Thomas, M.
Weederman, B. Fuemmeler, C. Martin, N. Dhurandhar, C.
Bredlau, S.B. Heymsfield, E. Ravussin and C. Bouchard.
Montclair State Univ., Dominican Univ., IL, Duke Univ. Med. Ctr.
and Pennington Biomed. Res. Ctr., Baton Rouge.
12:00
360.7
Dietary quality and obesity: is there a
socioeconomic gradient in U.S. adults?
L. Zhang, S.M. Camhi,
L. Shi and L.L. Hayman. Univ. of Massachusetts Boston.
12:15
360.8
Gender-specific associations of socioeconomic
factors and obesity among urban adults in Turkey.
N. Fitzgerald,
H. Turnagol, S. Basoglu and N. Kosar. Rutgers Univ. and
Hacettepe Univ. and Bilgi Univ., Turkey.
361. DIETARY FACTORS AFFECTING LIPID
METABOLISM
Minisymposium
(Sponsored by: Energy and Macronutrient Metabolism
RIS)
t
ue
. 10:30
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 156C
C
haired
: C. s
mas
C
oChaired
: l. z
hao
10:30
361.1
High dietary protein intake results in lower
intra hepatic lipid content in healthy humans on a hypercaloric
high-fat diet.
A. Rietman, J. Schwarz, E. Siebelink, F. Kok,
D. Tomé and M. Mensink. Wageningen Univ., Netherlands,
AgroParisTech.
10:45
361.2
Effects of exercise on fasting triglyceride-
rich lipoproteins from hepatic and intestinal origin.
L. Egli, V.
Lecoultre, F. Theytaz, P. Schneiter and L. Tappy. Univ. of
Lausanne and Lausanne Univ. Hosp.
11:00
361.3
Composition of dietary fat source shapes gut
microbiota architecture and alters host inflammatory mediators
in mouse adipose tissue.
E. Huang, V. Leone, S. Devkota,
Y. Wang, M. Brady, S. Donovan and E. Chang. Univ. of
Chicago, Harvard Univ., Boston and Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-
Champaign.
11:15
361.4
Niacin (vitamin B3, nicotinic acid) decreases
VLDL-apolipoprotein B secretion and reduces hepatic and
blood lipid concentrations: roles of niacin metabolism and
autophagy degradation.
L. Guo, A. Tuyama, C. Butkinaree, K.
Chung, M.D. O’Donnell, E. Montenont and E.A. Fisher. NYU
Sch. of Med.
11:30
361.5
Distinct pathological and lipidomic signature of
guinea pigs with cholesterol-induced non-alcoholic fatty liver
disease.
R.C. deOgburn, D. Aguilar, J.A. Smyth, D. Bibus,
J. Volek and M.L. Fernandez. Univ. of Connecticut and Lipid
Technol., Austin, MN.
11:45
361.6
Moderate alcohol consumption alters hepatic
adipoR1/SREBP-1c and SIRT1 activity in rats with pre-
existing NASH.
A.F. Nascimento, B. IP, R.A.M. Luvizotto and
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