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Ranjit Mohan Anjana

Researcher at Indian Council of Medical Research

Publications -  300
Citations -  30665

Ranjit Mohan Anjana is an academic researcher from Indian Council of Medical Research. The author has contributed to research in topics: Diabetes mellitus & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 46, co-authored 221 publications receiving 21128 citations. Previous affiliations of Ranjit Mohan Anjana include Madras Medical College.

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Height and body-mass index trajectories of school-aged children and adolescents from 1985 to 2019 in 200 countries and territories: a pooled analysis of 2181 population-based studies with 65 million participants

Andrea Rodriguez-Martinez, +1361 more
- 07 Nov 2020 - 
TL;DR: Girls in South Korea, Vietnam, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, and some central Asian countries and boys in central and western Europe had the healthiest changes in anthropometric status over the past 3·5 decades because, compared with children and adolescents in other countries, they had a much larger gain in height than they did in BMI.
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Effects of diabetes definition on global surveillance of diabetes prevalence and diagnosis: A pooled analysis of 96 population-based studies with 331 288 participants

Goodarz Danaei, +430 more
TL;DR: The effect of different diagnostic definitions on both the population prevalence of diabetes and the classification of previously undiagnosed individuals as having diabetes versus not having diabetes in a pooled analysis of data from population-based health examination surveys in different regions is assessed.
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Validation of Smartphone Based Retinal Photography for Diabetic Retinopathy Screening

TL;DR: Retinal photography using FOP camera is effective for screening and diagnosis of DR and STDR with high sensitivity and specificity and has substantial agreement with conventional retinal photography.
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The Stepwise Approach to Diabetes Prevention: Results From the D-CLIP Randomized Controlled Trial.

TL;DR: Stepwise diabetes prevention in people with prediabetes can effectively reduce diabetes incidence by a third in community settings; however, people with iIFG may require different interventions.