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Institution

Medical Research Council

GovernmentLondon, United Kingdom
About: Medical Research Council is a government organization based out in London, United Kingdom. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Malaria. The organization has 16430 authors who have published 19150 publications receiving 1475494 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
17 Apr 1998-Cell
TL;DR: It is suggested that enteric glia play an essential role in maintaining the integrity of the bowel and suggest that their loss or dysfunction may contribute to the cellular mechanisms of inflammatory bowel disease.

549 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The life experience of 104 patients with Fredrickson's type-II hyperbetalipo-proteinaemia has been compared with 41 patients with hyperlipoproteinaemia associated with hypertriglyceridaemia and the risks were lower but the risk of peripheral vascular disease was increased.

549 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Oct 2008-Diabetes
TL;DR: In this article, a prospective study reported inverse associations between baseline serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25(OH)D) and future glycemia and insulin resistance after adjustment for age, sex, smoking, BMI, season, and baseline value of each metabolic outcome variable.
Abstract: OBJECTIVE— Accumulating epidemiological evidence suggests that hypovitaminosis D may be associated with type 2 diabetes and related metabolic risks. However, prospective data using the biomarker serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D [25(OH)D] are limited and therefore examined in the present study. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS— A total of 524 randomly selected nondiabetic men and women, aged 40–69 years at baseline, with measurements for serum 25(OH)D and IGF-1 in the population-based Ely Study, had glycemic status (oral glucose tolerance), lipids, insulin, anthropometry, and blood pressure measured and metabolic syndrome risk (metabolic syndrome z score) derived at baseline and at 10 years of follow-up. RESULTS— Age-adjusted baseline mean serum 25(OH)D was greater in men (64.5 nmol/l [95% CI 61.2–67.9]) than women (57.2 nmol/l [54.4,60.0]) and varied with season (highest late summer). Baseline 25(OH)D was associated inversely with 10-year risk of hyperglycemia (fasting glucose: β = −0.0023, P = 0.019; 2-h glucose: β = −0.0097, P = 0.006), insulin resistance (fasting insulin β = −0.1467, P = 0.010; homeostasis model assessment of insulin resistance [HOMA-IR]: β = −0.0059, P = 0.005), and metabolic syndrome z score (β = −0.0016, P = 0.048) after adjustment for age, sex, smoking, BMI, season, and baseline value of each metabolic outcome variable. Associations with 2-h glucose, insulin, and HOMA-IR remained significant after further adjustment for IGF-1, parathyroid hormone, calcium, physical activity, and social class. CONCLUSIONS— This prospective study reports inverse associations between baseline serum 25(OH)D and future glycemia and insulin resistance. These associations are potentially important in understanding the etiology of abnormal glucose metabolism and warrant investigation in larger, specifically designed prospective studies and randomized controlled trials of supplementation.

547 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
23 Apr 2013-PLOS ONE
TL;DR: None of the metrics as evaluated systematically outperformed all other metrics across a wide range of standardised kinematic conditions, however, choice of metric explains different degrees of variance in daily human physical activity.
Abstract: Introduction: Human body acceleration is often used as an indicator of daily physical activity in epidemiological research. Raw acceleration signals contain three basic components: movement, gravit ...

547 citations


Authors

Showing all 16441 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Shizuo Akira2611308320561
Trevor W. Robbins2311137164437
Richard A. Flavell2311328205119
George Davey Smith2242540248373
Nicholas J. Wareham2121657204896
Cyrus Cooper2041869206782
Martin White1962038232387
Frank E. Speizer193636135891
Michael Rutter188676151592
Richard Peto183683231434
Terrie E. Moffitt182594150609
Kay-Tee Khaw1741389138782
Chris D. Frith173524130472
Phillip A. Sharp172614117126
Avshalom Caspi170524113583
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20236
20229
2021262
2020243
2019231
2018309