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Muhammad Bayu Sasongko

Researcher at Gadjah Mada University

Publications -  72
Citations -  1549

Muhammad Bayu Sasongko is an academic researcher from Gadjah Mada University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Diabetic retinopathy & Diabetes mellitus. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 57 publications receiving 1261 citations. Previous affiliations of Muhammad Bayu Sasongko include University of Melbourne.

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Retinal vascular tortuosity in persons with diabetes and diabetic retinopathy.

TL;DR: Persons with diabetes had more tortuous retinal vasculature than persons without diabetes and increased arteriolar tortuosity was associated with mild and moderate stages of DR, which suggests that retinal vascular Tortuosity might be an early indicator of microvascular damage in diabetes.
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Alterations in Retinal Microvascular Geometry in Young Type 1 Diabetes

TL;DR: Key diabetes-related factors affect retinal microvascular geometry in young type 1 diabetes, even in those without evidence of retinopathy, and these early retinal alterations may be markers of diabetes microv vascular complications.
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Differential Association of Serum Lipids with Diabetic Retinopathy and Diabetic Macular Edema

TL;DR: Serum lipids are independently associated with the CSME, but not with DR, mild or moderate DME, or macular thickness, which reflects the different impact of hyperlipidemia in the pathogenesis of DR and DME and may explain the discrepancies in previous studies.
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Serum Apolipoprotein AI and B Are Stronger Biomarkers of Diabetic Retinopathy Than Traditional Lipids

TL;DR: Serum apolipoprotein levels may be stronger biomarkers of diabetic retinopathy than traditional lipid measures and improved the ability to discriminate diabetic Retinopathy by 8%.
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Retinal Vascular Geometry Predicts Incident Retinopathy in Young People With Type 1 Diabetes: A prospective cohort study from adolescence

TL;DR: Lower arteriolar LDR and greater ST were independently associated with incident retinopathy in young people with type 1 diabetes, suggesting these vascular geometry measures may serve as risk markers for diabetic Retinopathy and provide insights into the early structural changes in diabetic microvascular complications.