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Anny H. Xiang

Researcher at Kaiser Permanente

Publications -  210
Citations -  15006

Anny H. Xiang is an academic researcher from Kaiser Permanente. The author has contributed to research in topics: Gestational diabetes & Diabetes mellitus. The author has an hindex of 50, co-authored 179 publications receiving 12881 citations. Previous affiliations of Anny H. Xiang include University of Southern California & University of California, Los Angeles.

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TRIPOD (TRoglitazone In the Prevention Of Diabetes): a randomized, placebo-controlled trial of troglitazone in women with prior gestational diabetes mellitus

TL;DR: The unique two-phase study design of the TRIPOD trial will permit testing not only of the biological question about reversal of insulin resistance and prevention of diabetes, but also of the clinical question about whether early intervention is superior to late intervention.
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Gestational Diabetes: Antepartum Characteristics That Predict Postpartum Glucose Intolerance and Type 2 Diabetes in Latino Women

TL;DR: The association of postpar-turn IGT with weight gain and an early gestational age at diagnosis of GDM suggests a role for chronic insulin resistance in mediating hyperglycemia outside the 3rd trimester in women with such a β-cell defect.
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Ambient Air Pollutants Have Adverse Effects on Insulin and Glucose Homeostasis in Mexican Americans

TL;DR: Exposure to ambient air pollutants adversely affects glucose tolerance, insulin sensitivity, and blood lipid concentrations, and the findings suggest that ambient air pollution may contribute to the pathophysiology in the development of T2D and related sequelae.
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Clinical predictors for a high risk for the development of diabetes mellitus in the early puerperium in women with recent gestational diabetes mellitus.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors identify which maternal, antepartum, or neonatal clinical parameters were predictive for a high risk of diabetes mellitus in the puerperium in women with recent gestational Diabetes mellitus and to calculate the associated rates and odds ratios.
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Racial and ethnic disparities in diabetes risk after gestational diabetes mellitus

TL;DR: Racial/ethnic disparities exist in risk of diabetes after gestational diabetes mellitus, particularly black women with GDM, which highlights the importance of developing an effective diabetes screening and prevention programme in women with the highest risk of developing diabetes.