scispace - formally typeset
F

Felix Kreier

Researcher at University of Amsterdam

Publications -  14
Citations -  1668

Felix Kreier is an academic researcher from University of Amsterdam. The author has contributed to research in topics: Adipose tissue & White adipose tissue. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 14 publications receiving 1585 citations. Previous affiliations of Felix Kreier include Leiden University Medical Center.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Sleep Duration as a Risk Factor for Diabetes Incidence in a Large US Sample

TL;DR: Short sleep duration could be a significant risk factor for diabetes and the association between long sleep duration and diabetes incidence is more likely to be due to some unmeasured confounder such as poor sleep quality.
Journal ArticleDOI

Selective parasympathetic innervation of subcutaneous and intra-abdominal fat — functional implications

TL;DR: In this article, a rat was first sympathetically denervated and then injected with the retrograde transneuronal tracer pseudorabies virus (PRV), and the resulting labeling of PRV in the vagal motor nuclei of the brain stem reveals that adipose tissue receives vagal input.
Book ChapterDOI

Organization of circadian functions: interaction with the body.

TL;DR: In this chapter attention will be paid to fundamental hypothalamic systems that control metabolism, circulation and the immune system, especially the role of the arcuate nucleus (ARC), which is crucial in the maintenance of energy homeostasis as an integrator of long- and short-term hunger and satiety signals.
Journal ArticleDOI

Tracing from fat tissue, liver, and pancreas: a neuroanatomical framework for the role of the brain in type 2 diabetes.

TL;DR: In this article, the autonomic nervous system has a distinct organization in different body compartments, where the same neurons control intra-dominal organs (intraabdominal fat, liver, and pancreas), whereas sc adipose tissue located outside the abdominal compartment receives input from another set of autonomic neurons.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hypothesis: Shifting the Equilibrium From Activity to Food Leads to Autonomic Unbalance and the Metabolic Syndrome

TL;DR: “The stability of the internal environment is the condition that life should be free and independent…”