Publications by authors named "O Walrant-Debray"

Objective: The prevalence of lower limb deformities physiologically decreases after 5 years of age. It remains high in some tropical and subtropical regions where it has been associated with severe vitamin D deficiency, low calcium/milk intakes, malnutrition, and/or fluoride overexposure. Very little data is available in apparently healthy Caucasian children and adolescents.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

No consensus has been reached on the serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D [25(OH)D] levels required to ensure optimal bone health around menarche. We searched for a possible interaction of 25(OH)D levels and calcium intake on lumbar spine mineralization and on biologic features of bone metabolism in healthy late-pubertal girls. Lumbar spine parameters (ie, area, mineral content, and density) and calcium intake were evaluated in 211 healthy white adolescent girls at pubertal stages IV-V (11 to 16.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Calcium homeostasis and bone metabolism require the vitamin D receptor (VDR) to function properly, as evidenced in patients and transgenic mice with VDR mutations. We have shown that (A/G) polymorphism at the -1012 locus of the VDR promoter (rs4516035) is frequent in European populations, may influence VDR expression, is associated with height in French adolescent girls, and is associated with their lumbar spine mineral density in case of insufficient milk intake. Here, an association study was performed in a cohort of Moldovan children and adolescents, living at latitude similar to the first cohort but receiving a cereal-based diet with very low milk/dairy product intakes.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Familial hypophosphatemic rickets is a rare disease, which is mostly transmitted as an X-linked dominant trait, and mutations on the phosphate regulating gene with homologies to endopeptidases on the X-chromosome (PHEX) gene are responsible for the disease in most familial cases. In this study we analyzed PHEX in a large cohort of 118 pedigrees representing 56 familial cases and 62 sporadic cases. The high-resolution melting curves technique was tested as a screening method, along with classical sequencing.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Context: Treatment of X-linked hypophosphatemic rickets improves bone mineralization and bone deformities, but its effect on skeletal growth is highly variable.

Objective: Genetic variants in the promoter region of the vitamin D receptor (VDR) gene may explain the response to treatment because this receptor mediates vitamin D action.

Design: We studied the VDR promoter haplotype structure in a large cohort of 91 patients with hypophosphatemic rickets including 62 patients receiving 1alpha-hydroxyvitamin D3 derivatives and phosphates from early childhood on.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF