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Yi Chen Yang
Researcher at National Health Research Institutes
Publications - 6
Citations - 1772
Yi Chen Yang is an academic researcher from National Health Research Institutes. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Life expectancy. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 6 publications receiving 1543 citations. Previous affiliations of Yi Chen Yang include China Medical University (Taiwan).
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Journal ArticleDOI
Minimum amount of physical activity for reduced mortality and extended life expectancy: a prospective cohort study
Chi Pang Wen,Chi Pang Wen,Jackson Pui Man Wai,Min Kuang Tsai,Min Kuang Tsai,Yi Chen Yang,Yi Chen Yang,Tongguang Cheng,Meng Chih Lee,Hui Ting Chan,Chwen Keng Tsao,Shan Pou Tsai,Xifeng Wu +12 more
TL;DR: Benefits of a range of volumes of physical activity in a Taiwanese population between 1996 and 2008 were applicable to all age groups and both sexes, and to those with cardiovascular disease risks.
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Hepatocellular Carcinoma Risk Prediction Model for the General Population: The Predictive Power of Transaminases
Chi Pang Wen,Jie Lin,Yi Chen Yang,Yi Chen Yang,Min Kuang Tsai,Min Kuang Tsai,Chwen Keng Tsao,Carol J. Etzel,Maosheng Huang,Chung Y. Hsu,Yuanqing Ye,Lopa Mishra,Ernest T. Hawk,Xifeng Wu +13 more
TL;DR: Models with transaminase data were best able to predict hepatocellular carcinoma risk even among subjects with unknown or HBV- or HCV-negative infection status, and internal validation showed high discriminatory accuracy and calibration of these models.
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Is High Serum Uric Acid a Risk Marker or a Target for Treatment? Examination of its Independent Effect in a Large Cohort With Low Cardiovascular Risk
Chi Pang Wen,Chi Pang Wen,Tongguang Cheng,Hui Ting Chan,Min Kuang Tsai,Wen Shen Isabella Chung,Shan Pou Tsai,Mark L Wahlqvist,Yi Chen Yang,Shiuan Be Wu,Po Huang Chiang,Po Huang Chiang,Sung Feng Wen +12 more
TL;DR: Increased serum uric acid level is a minor, but significant, risk factor for all-cause and CVD mortality, however, except for a small proportion, it is more a risk marker than a target for treatment and is not an independent risk.
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Urine dipstick to detect trace proteinuria: an underused tool for an underappreciated risk marker.
TL;DR: In the medical evaluations of healthy individuals, urinalysis receives relatively little attention compared to blood work as mentioned in this paper, however, one finding from the urination--proteinuria--carries a risk far higher than many abnormalities identified from blood studies.