Publicacións nas que colabora con Lidia Ángeles Daimiel Ruiz (113)

2023

  1. An Interplay between Oxidative Stress (Lactate Dehydrogenase) and Inflammation (Anisocytosis) Mediates COVID-19 Severity Defined by Routine Clinical Markers

    Antioxidants, Vol. 12, Núm. 2

  2. Association of adiposity and its changes over time with COVID-19 risk in older adults with overweight/obesity and metabolic syndrome: a longitudinal evaluation in the PREDIMED-Plus cohort

    BMC Medicine, Vol. 21, Núm. 1

  3. Association of monetary diet cost of foods and diet quality in Spanish older adults

    Frontiers in Public Health, Vol. 11

  4. Carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions and adherence to Mediterranean diet in an adult population: the Mediterranean diet index as a pollution level index

    Environmental Health: A Global Access Science Source, Vol. 22, Núm. 1

  5. Comparative effects of glucagon-like peptide-1 receptors agonists, 4-dipeptidyl peptidase inhibitors, and metformin on metabolic syndrome

    Biomedicine and Pharmacotherapy, Vol. 161

  6. Corrigendum: Role of NAFLD on the health related QoL response to lifestyle in patients with metabolic syndrome: The PREDIMED plus cohort(Front. Endocrinol., (2022), 13, (868795), 10.3389/fendo.2022.868795)

    Frontiers in Endocrinology

  7. Dietary diversity and depression: Cross-sectional and longitudinal analyses in Spanish adult population with metabolic syndrome. Findings from PREDIMED-Plus trial

    Public Health Nutrition, Vol. 26, Núm. 3, pp. 598-610

  8. Dietary intake of polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins and furans, adiposity and obesity status.

    Environmental Research, Vol. 227

  9. Higher versus lower nut consumption and changes in cognitive performance over two years in a population at risk of cognitive decline: a cohort study

    American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, Vol. 118, Núm. 2, pp. 360-368

  10. Impact of COVID-19 pandemic on the PREDIMED-Plus randomized clinical trial: Effects on the interventions, participants follow-up, and adiposity

    Frontiers in Nutrition, Vol. 9

  11. Increased ultra-processed food consumption is associated with worsening of cardiometabolic risk factors in adults with metabolic syndrome: Longitudinal analysis from a randomized trial

    Atherosclerosis, Vol. 377, pp. 12-23