Division of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Rhode Island Hospital, Alpert Medical School of Brown University, Providence, RI, USA. Electronic address: jfeng@lifespan.org.
Publications dans "Canaux potassiques calcium-dépendants de petite conductance" :
Krannert Institute of Cardiology and Division of Cardiology, Department of Medicine, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, Indiana; Department of Cardiology, Xinhua Hospital, School of Medicine, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Shanghai, China.
Publications dans "Canaux potassiques calcium-dépendants de petite conductance" :
Krannert Institute of Cardiology and Division of Cardiology, Department of Medicine, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, Indiana. Electronic address: chenpp@iu.edu.
Publications dans "Canaux potassiques calcium-dépendants de petite conductance" :
First Department of Medicine, Medical Faculty Mannheim, University Medical Centre Mannheim (UMM), Heidelberg University, 68167 Mannheim, Germany; Department of Ophthalmology, Affiliated Hospital of North Sichuan Medical College, 637000 Nanchong, Sichuan, China.
Publications dans "Canaux potassiques calcium-dépendants de petite conductance" :
Department of Cardiology and Angiology, Ruhr University, Bochum, Germany; Institut für Forschung und Lehre (IFL), Department of Molecular and Experimental Cardiology, Ruhr-University Bochum, Bochum, Germany.
Publications dans "Canaux potassiques calcium-dépendants de petite conductance" :
First Department of Medicine, Medical Faculty Mannheim, University Medical Centre Mannheim (UMM), Heidelberg University, 68167 Mannheim, Germany; European Center for AngioScience (ECAS), German Center for Cardiovascular Research (DZHK) partner site Heidelberg/Mannheim, and Centre for Cardiovascular Acute Medicine Mannheim (ZKAM), Medical Centre Mannheim, Heidelberg University, Germany; Key Laboratory of Medical Electrophysiology of Ministry of Education and Medical Electrophysiological Key Laboratory of Sichuan Province, Institute of Cardiovascular Research, Southwest Medical University, 646000, Sichuan, China. Electronic address: Xiaobo.zhou@medma.uni-heidelberg.de.
Publications dans "Canaux potassiques calcium-dépendants de petite conductance" :
First Department of Medicine, Medical Faculty Mannheim, University Medical Centre Mannheim (UMM), Heidelberg University, 68167 Mannheim, Germany; European Center for AngioScience (ECAS), German Center for Cardiovascular Research (DZHK) partner site Heidelberg/Mannheim, and Centre for Cardiovascular Acute Medicine Mannheim (ZKAM), Medical Centre Mannheim, Heidelberg University, Germany.
Publications dans "Canaux potassiques calcium-dépendants de petite conductance" :
Body composition is now recognized to have a major impact on health and disease. Imaging enables its analysis in an objective and quantitative way through diverse techniques such as dual-energy X-ray ...
Although obesity is associated with chronic disease, a large section of the population with high BMI does not have an increased risk of metabolic disease. Increased visceral adiposity and sarcopenia a...
We searched the following databases: Embase, Web of Science, and PubMed. There was a total of 354 search results. After removing duplicates, irrelevant studies, and reviews(a total of 303), 51 studies...
AI techniques have been studied for body composition analysis in the context of diabetes mellitus, hypertension, cancer and many specialized diseases. Imaging techniques employed for AI methods includ...
AI assisted measurement of body composition might assist in improved cardiovascular risk stratification when applied in the appropriate clinical context....
Although birth weight (BW) has been associated with later cardiovascular disease and type 2 diabetes, the role of birth fat mass (BFM) and birth fat-free mass (BFFM) on cardiometabolic health is uncle...
To examine associations of BW, BFM, and BFFM with later anthropometry, body composition, abdominal fat, and cardiometabolic markers....
Birth cohort data on standardized exposure variables (BW, BFM, and BFFM) and follow-up information at age 10 y on anthropometry, body composition, abdominal fat, and cardiometabolic markers were inclu...
Among 353 children, mean (SD) age was 9.8 (1.0) y, and 51.5% were boys. In the fully adjusted model, 1-SD higher BW and BFFM were associated with 0.81 cm (95% CI: 0.21, 1.41 cm) and 1.25 cm (95% CI: 0...
BW and BFFM rather than BFM are predictors of height and FFM index at 10 y. Children with higher BW and BFFM showed higher insulin concentrations and homeostasis model assessment of insulin resistance...
Gestational weight gain (GWG) and anthropometric trajectories may affect foetal programming and are potentially modifiable....
To assess concomitant patterns of change in weight, circumferences and adiposity across gestation as an integrated prenatal exposure, and determine how they relate to neonatal body composition....
Data are from a prospective cohort of singleton pregnancies (n = 2182) enrolled in United States perinatal centres, 2009-2013. Overall and by prepregnancy BMI group (overweight/obesity and healthy wei...
Six trajectory patterns reflecting co-occurring changes in weight and MUAC, SSF and TSF across pregnancy were identified overall and by body mass index (BMI) group. Among people with a healthy weight ...
Six integrated trajectory patterns of prenatal weight, subcutaneous adipose tissue and circumferences were observed that were minimally associated with neonatal body composition, suggesting a stronger...
The general perception is that menstrual cycle is a factor related to body weight and body composition fluctuations in women. The lack of a standardized methodology of the so far conducted studies has...
In the current study measurements of body weight, circumferences, skinfolds and body composition with bioelectrical impedance analysis were conducted twice per week in 42 women during their menstrual ...
Body weight was found to be statistically significantly higher during menstruation compared to the first week of the menstrual cycle by 0.450 kg, which could be attributed to a statistically significa...
An increase of approximately 0.5 kg was observed during women's menstrual cycle, mostly due to extracellular fluid retention at menstruation days. These findings could be taken into account to interpr...
This cross-sectional study used compositional data analysis (CoDA) to do the following: 1) analyze the relative associations between fat and lean tissues with cardiometabolic risk factors; and 2) esti...
A total of 397 adults with overweight or obesity were studied. Body composition consisted of visceral fat, abdominal subcutaneous fat, peripheral subcutaneous fat, other fat depots, skeletal muscle, a...
Visceral fat mass, relative to the mass of the remaining tissues, was significantly associated with the metabolic syndrome score and five of eight remaining risk factors (p < 0.05). The relative contr...
These CoDA findings reinforce that excess visceral fat contributes to less-favorable cardiometabolic risk factors....
The proportion of obese or overweight patients in COPD patients is increasing. Although BMI, WC and other easy to measure indicators have been proven to be related to the risk of COPD, they cannot acc...
Obesity is the most extended metabolic alteration worldwide increasing the risk for the development of cardiometabolic alterations such as type 2 diabetes, hypertension, and dyslipidemia. Body mass in...
Metabolism encompasses the entire array of chemical reactions continuously occurring within the body that sustain life and maintain normal physiological functions [...]....