Metabolic profiles of male meat eaters, fish eaters, vegetarians, and vegans from the EPIC-Oxford cohort12
暂无分享,去创建一个
T. Key | M. Gunter | A. Cross | A. Scalbert | R. Travis | M. Carayol | P. Ferrari | P. Appleby | Julie A. Schmidt | S. Rinaldi | D. Achaintre | G. Fensom | P. Ferrari | David Achaintre | S. Rinaldi
[1] Joshua N Sampson,et al. Metabolomics in nutritional epidemiology: identifying metabolites associated with diet and quantifying their potential to uncover diet-disease relations in populations. , 2014, The American journal of clinical nutrition.
[2] D. Wishart,et al. The food metabolome: a window over dietary exposure. , 2014, The American journal of clinical nutrition.
[3] T. Spector,et al. Lipidomics Profiling and Risk of Cardiovascular Disease in the Prospective Population-Based Bruneck Study , 2014, Circulation.
[4] Hendriek C Boshuizen,et al. Investigating sources of variability in metabolomic data in the EPIC study: the Principal Component Partial R-square (PC-PR2) method , 2014, Metabolomics.
[5] Simone Wahl,et al. Targeted Metabolomics Identifies Reliable and Stable Metabolites in Human Serum and Plasma Samples , 2014, PloS one.
[6] T. Key,et al. Serum concentrations of cholesterol, apolipoprotein A-I, and apolipoprotein B in a total of 1 694 meat-eaters, fish-eaters, vegetarians, and vegans , 2013, European Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
[7] A. Shevchenko,et al. Plasma Lipid Composition and Risk of Developing Cardiovascular Disease , 2013, PloS one.
[8] Paolo Vineis,et al. Deciphering the complex: Methodological overview of statistical models to derive OMICS‐based biomarkers , 2013, Environmental and molecular mutagenesis.
[9] T. Key,et al. Risk of hospitalization or death from ischemic heart disease among British vegetarians and nonvegetarians: results from the EPIC-Oxford cohort study. , 2013, The American journal of clinical nutrition.
[10] A. Peters,et al. Identification of Serum Metabolites Associated With Risk of Type 2 Diabetes Using a Targeted Metabolomic Approach , 2013, Diabetes.
[11] D. Vance,et al. Phosphatidylcholine biosynthesis and lipoprotein metabolism. , 2012, Biochimica et biophysica acta.
[12] T. Pischon,et al. Reliability of Serum Metabolite Concentrations over a 4-Month Period Using a Targeted Metabolomic Approach , 2011, PloS one.
[13] R. Sinha,et al. Urinary Biomarkers of Meat Consumption , 2011, Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention.
[14] Lorraine Brennan,et al. Dietary intake patterns are reflected in metabolomic profiles: potential role in dietary assessment studies. , 2011, The American journal of clinical nutrition.
[15] Royston Goodacre,et al. Systems level studies of mammalian metabolomes: the roles of mass spectrometry and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. , 2011, Chemical Society reviews.
[16] S. Cai,et al. Identification of biochemical changes in lactovegetarian urine using 1H NMR spectroscopy and pattern recognition , 2010, Analytical and bioanalytical chemistry.
[17] Y. Hannun,et al. An overview of sphingolipid metabolism: from synthesis to breakdown. , 2010, Advances in experimental medicine and biology.
[18] Oliver Fiehn,et al. Mass-spectrometry-based metabolomics: limitations and recommendations for future progress with particular focus on nutrition research , 2009, Metabolomics.
[19] Heng Tao Shen,et al. Principal Component Analysis , 2009, Encyclopedia of Biometrics.
[20] Ian J. Brown,et al. Human metabolic phenotype diversity and its association with diet and blood pressure , 2008, Nature.
[21] John C. Lindon,et al. The handbook of metabonomics and metabolomics , 2007 .
[22] T. Lundstedt,et al. Chapter 6 – Chemometrics Techniques for Metabonomics , 2007 .
[23] Elaine Holmes,et al. Susceptibility of human metabolic phenotypes to dietary modulation. , 2006, Journal of proteome research.
[24] T. Key,et al. Weight gain over 5 years in 21 966 meat-eating, fish-eating, vegetarian, and vegan men and women in EPIC-Oxford , 2006, International Journal of Obesity.
[25] O. Fiehn. Metabolomics – the link between genotypes and phenotypes , 2004, Plant Molecular Biology.
[26] T. Key,et al. EPIC–Oxford:lifestyle characteristics and nutrient intakes in a cohort of 33 883 meat-eaters and 31 546 non meat-eaters in the UK , 2003, Public Health Nutrition.
[27] S. Zeisel,et al. Concentrations of choline-containing compounds and betaine in common foods. , 2003, The Journal of nutrition.
[28] T. Key,et al. Validity of self-reported height and weight in 4808 EPIC–Oxford participants , 2002, Public Health Nutrition.
[29] S A Bingham,et al. Validation of weighed records and other methods of dietary assessment using the 24 h urine nitrogen technique and other biological markers , 1995, British Journal of Nutrition.
[30] N E Day,et al. Comparison of dietary assessment methods in nutritional epidemiology: weighed records v. 24 h recalls, food-frequency questionnaires and estimated-diet records , 1994, British Journal of Nutrition.
[31] B. Holland,et al. Fish and fish products: third supplement to the fifth edition of McCance and Widdowson's 'The composition of foods'. , 1993 .
[32] B. Holland,et al. Vegetables, herbs and spices: fifth supplement to McCance and Widdowson's The Composition of Foods. , 1991 .
[33] B. Holland,et al. Milk Products and Eggs: Fourth Supplement to McCance and Widdowson's the Composition of Foods , 1989 .
[34] R. Mccance,et al. Cereals and cereal products: third supplement to McCance and Widdowsons the Composition of foods , 1988 .
[35] A. Paul,et al. McCance and Widdowson's 'The composition of foods': dietary fibre in egg, meat and fish dishes. , 1979, Journal of human nutrition.