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The possibility that nutrition in early life could influence
propensity to adult disease is of great concern to public health.
Extensive research carried out in pregnant women, in breastfeeding
women and in infants strongly suggests that nutrition in early life
has major effects on long-term health and well-being. Health
problems such as hypertension, tendency to diabetes, obesity, blood
lipids, vascular disease, bone health, behaviour and learning and
longevity may be a ~imprinteda (TM) during early life. This process
is defined as a ~programminga (TM) whereby a nutritional stimulus
operating at a critical, sensitive period of pre and postnatal life
imprints permanent effects on the structure, physiology and
metabolism.
For this reason, academics and industry set-up the EC supported
Scientific Workshop -Early Nutrition and its Later Consequences:
New Opportunities. The prime objective of the Workshop was to
generate a sound exchange of the latest scientific developments
within the field of early nutrition to look for opportunities for
new preventive health concepts. Further, a closer look was taken at
the development of food applications which could provide (future)
mothers and infants with improved nutrition that will ultimately
lead to better future health. The Workshop was organised by the
Dept. of Pediatrics, University of Munich, Germany in collaboration
with the Danone Institutes and the Infant Nutrition Cluster, a
collaboration of three large research projects funded by the
EU.
Many of the contributors have important roles to play in a new
EC supported integrated project: Early nutrition programming of
adult health (EARNEST) which will take place between 2005 and2010
and will involve more than 40 research centres. Further Workshops
on the same theme are planned as part of this project.
Nevermind, Achtung Baby, Use Your Illusion 1&2 - the 90s saw
some classic albums produced by artists such as Nirvana, U2, Gun n'
Roses and Red Hot Chili Peppers, as well as a resurgence in country
music popularized by Shania Twain and Garth Brooks. Combining
information from both the US and UK charts provided by the
Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) and British
Phonographic Industry (BPI), 100 Best Selling Albums of the 90s
features chart-topping work from Michael Jackson, Puff Daddy and
Green Day. Each album entry is accompanied by the original sleeve
artwork - front and back - and is packed full of facts and
recording information, including a complete track listing, musician
and production credits, and an authoritative commentary on the
record and its place in cultural history. Soundtracks featured
include the 60s and 70s hits on Forrest Gump, the Elton John/Tim
Rice songs in The Lion King, and the orchestral score for Titanic
(and Celine Dion's Oscar-winning My Heart Will Go On). Other
stand-out albums include the Eagles' reforming to make Hell Freezes
Over and Eric Clapton's Unplugged, a career revival for him in the
popular 90s back-to-basics semi-acoustic series. With vinyl sales
now at their highest in 25 years, 100 Best Selling Albums of the
90s is an expert celebration of popular music from Sheryl Crow to
Shania Twain, from the Spice Girls to the Backstreet Boys, from
Gloria Estefan to Michael Jackson to Lauryn Hill.
Capturing the state of the art of the interplay between positivity,
noncommutative analysis, and related areas including partial
differential equations, harmonic analysis, and operator theory,
this volume was initiated on the occasion of the Delft conference
in honour of Ben de Pagter's 65th birthday. It will be of interest
to researchers in positivity, noncommutative analysis, and related
fields. Contributions by Shavkat Ayupov, Amine Ben Amor, Karim
Boulabiar, Qingying Bu, Gerard Buskes, Martijn Caspers, Jurie
Conradie, Garth Dales, Marcel de Jeu, Peter Dodds, Theresa Dodds,
Julio Flores, Jochen Gluck, Jacobus Grobler, Wolter Groenevelt,
Markus Haase, Klaas Pieter Hart, Francisco Hernandez, Jamel Jaber,
Rien Kaashoek, Turabay Kalandarov, Anke Kalauch, Arkady Kitover,
Erik Koelink, Karimbergen Kudaybergenov, Louis Labuschagne, Yongjin
Li, Nick Lindemulder, Emiel Lorist, Qi Lu, Miek Messerschmidt,
Susumu Okada, Mehmet Orhon, Denis Potapov, Werner Ricker, Stephan
Roberts, Pablo Roman, Anton Schep, Claud Steyn, Fedor Sukochev,
James Sweeney, Guido Sweers, Pedro Tradacete, Jan Harm van der
Walt, Onno van Gaans, Jan van Neerven, Arnoud van Rooij, Freek van
Schagen, Dominic Vella, Mark Veraar, Anthony Wickstead, Marten
Wortel, Ivan Yaroslavtsev, and Dmitriy Zanin.
The possibility that nutrition in early life could influence
propensity to adult disease is of great concern to public health.
Extensive research carried out in pregnant women, in breastfeeding
women and in infants strongly suggests that nutrition in early life
has major effects on long-term health and well-being. Health
problems such as hypertension, tendency to diabetes, obesity, blood
lipids, vascular disease, bone health, behaviour and learning and
longevity may be imprinted during early life. This process is
defined as programming whereby a nutritional stimulus operating at
a critical, sensitive period of pre and postnatal life imprints
permanent effects on the structure, physiology and metabolism.
For this reason, academics and industry set-up the EC supported
Scientific Workshop -Early Nutrition and its Later Consequences:
New Opportunities. The prime objective of the Workshop was to
generate a sound exchange of the latest scientific developments
within the field of early nutrition to look for opportunities for
new preventive health concepts. Further, a closer look was taken at
the development of food applications which could provide (future)
mothers and infants with improved nutrition that will ultimately
lead to better future health. The Workshop was organised by the
Dept. of Pediatrics, University of Munich, Germany in collaboration
with the Danone Institutes and the Infant Nutrition Cluster, a
collaboration of three large research projects funded by the
EU.
Many of the contributors have important roles to play in a new
EC supported integrated project: Early nutrition programming of
adult health (EARNEST) which will take place between 2005 and 2010
and will involve more than 40 research centres. Further Workshops
on the same theme are planned as part of this project."
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