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Determinant Factors of Vitamin D Levels in Down Syndrome of Indonesian Children
Nur Rochmah
,
Muhammad Faizi
,
Yuni Hisbiyah
, Rayi Kurnia Perwitasari
, Tyas Maslakhatien Nuzula
,
Ema Qurnianingsih
,
Zakiyatul Faizah
Osteoporosis and Metabolic Disease Research Group
Pediatric Kidney Research Group
Pediatric Gastroenterology, Immunology, and Microbiota
Tissue Injury, Repair and Regeneration
Pediatric Growth, Development And Non-Communicable Diseases Research Center (PGD-NCD)
Pediatric Tropical Diseases And Immunology Research Group (Kelompok Studi Imunologi, Penyakit Infeksi Dan Tropik Anak Surabaya (KSPITA))
Department of Pediatrics
Faculty of Medicine
Pediatrics
Pusat Riset Pendidikan Kedokteran
OMICS Research Group Biokimia Kedokteran
Department of Medical Biochemistry
Doctor Education
Human Genetics
Biologi Kedokteran
Biomedik (Biomedical Research Group)
Inovasi Komunikasi, Informasi dan Edukasi Kesehatan
Lembaga Penyakit Tropis
Produksi Embrio Sapi In Vitro Dan Bank Embrio
Andrology
Department of Medical Biology
Research output
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›
peer-review
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Keyphrases
Indonesian children
100%
Vitamin D Status
100%
Down Syndrome
100%
Vitamin D
42%
Sun Exposure
42%
Milk Consumption
42%
Indonesian
28%
Healthy Controls
28%
Meat Consumption
28%
Down Syndrome children
28%
Indonesia
14%
Statistical Analysis
14%
Chi-square
14%
Human Body
14%
Body Mass Index
14%
Spearman Correlation Test
14%
Protective Effect
14%
Environmental Factors
14%
Regression Testing
14%
Kruskal-Wallis Test
14%
Demographic Characteristics
14%
Group-based
14%
Vitamin D Deficiency
14%
Cross-sectional Method
14%
Primary Intention
14%
Subject Characteristics
14%
Hormonal Factors
14%
Children with Down Syndrome
14%
Autosomal Dominant Disorder
14%
Food Science
Vitamin D
100%
Meat Consumption
25%
Milk Consumption
12%