Margaret P. Martin
Vanderbilt University
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Margaret P. Martin.
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 1954
William J. McGanity; Richard O. Cannon; Edwin B. Bridgforth; Margaret P. Martin; Paul M. Densen; J. A. Newbill; G.Sydney McClellan; Amos Christie; J. Cyril Peterson; William J. Darby
Abstract 1. 1. The nutriture of 2,046 obstetric patients who attended the Vanderbilt University Hospital between 1945 and 1950 has been evaluated on the basis of nutrient intake, laboratory and biochemical determinations, and clinical physical examinations. 2. 2. The metabolic and physiologic changes in these during the gestational period have been outlined. 3. 3. Twenty-five abnormal obstetric and fetal conditions have been examined for evidence of nutritional stigmas during the gestational period. 4. 4. Different levels of nutrient intake have been studied for any influence on the development of obstetric and fetal abnormalities. 5. 5. In this group of patients who are reasonably representative of wide-spread obstetric experience in the United States, there is no clear indietment of nutritional lack as an important etiological agent in the numerous conditions studied. 6. 6. The findings to direct attention to the effect of pregnancy and lactation upon the nutritional state of the woman, particularly during the postpartum period or when an obstetric complication occurs.
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 1954
William J. McGanity; Richard O. Cannon; Edwin B. Bridgforth; Margaret P. Martin; Paul M. Densen; J. A. Newbill; G.Sydney McClellan; Amos Christie; J. Cyril Peterson; William J. Darby
Abstract 1. 1. A brief outline of the purpose and plan of the Vanderbilt Cooperative Study of Maternal and Infant Nutrition is given. 2. 2. The sample is 2,046 patients who had their complete prenatal and obstetric care at the Vanderbilt University Hospital. This is the total available material from 1945 to 1950. 3. 3. The economic status of these patients was in the low to moderate income range. 4. 4. The results of the prenatal and obstetric course of the 2,046 patients are reported, with comparison with generally accepted textbook incidences and also with incidences in representative previous nutritional studies.
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 1951
P.F. Hahn; E.L. Carothers; William J. Darby; Margaret P. Martin; C.W. Sheppard; Richard O. Cannon; A.S. Beam; Paul M. Densen; J.C. Peterson; G.S. McClellan
Journal of Nutrition | 1953
William J. Darby; William J. McGanity; Margaret P. Martin; Edwin B. Bridgforth; Paul M. Densen; Margaret M. Kaser; P. J. Ogle; J. A. Newbill; Anne Stockell; Mary Ellen Ferguson; Oscar Touster; G.Sydney McClellan; Claiborne Williams; Richard O. Cannon
Journal of Nutrition | 1957
Margaret P. Martin; Edwin B. Bridgforth; William J. McGanity; William J. Darby
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 1950
Amos Christie; Margaret P. Martin; Edwin L. Williams; Granville W. Hudson; James C. Lanier
Journal of Nutrition | 1953
William J. Darby; Paul M. Densen; Richard O. Cannon; Edwin B. Bridgforth; Margaret P. Martin; Margaret M. Kaser; Cyril Peterson; Amos Christie; William W. Frye; Katherine Justus; G.Sydney McClellan; Claiborne Williams; P. J. Ogle; P. F. Hahn; C. W. Sheppard; Ella Lee Carothers; J. A. Newbill
Journal of Nutrition | 1955
Mary Ellen Ferguson; Edwin B. Bridgforth; Mary L. Quaife; Margaret P. Martin; Richard O. Cannon; William J. McGanity; J. A. Newbill; William J. Darby
Journal of The American Dietetic Association | 1955
William J. McGanity; Edwin B. Bridgforth; Margaret P. Martin; J. A. Newbill; William J. Darby
American Journal of Public Health | 1954
Theodore D. Woolsey; William G. Cochran; Donald Mainland; Margaret P. Martin; Felix E. Moore; Robert E. Patton