Katrina King
University of Newcastle
18 Papers
30 Citations
Katrina King is an academic researcher from University of Newcastle. The author has contributed to research in topics: Eicosapentaenoic acid & Fatty liver. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 18 publications. Previous affiliations of Katrina King include Gosford Hospital.
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Papers
Hematologic and Urinary Excretion Anomalies in Patients with Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
Suzanne Niblett,Katrina King,R. Hugh Dunstan,Phillip Clifton-Bligh,Leigh Hoskin,Timothy K. Roberts,Greg Fulcher,Neil R. McGregor,Julie C. Dunsmore,Henry L. Butt,Iven Klineberg,Tony Rothkirch +11 more
TL;DR: The urinary excretion and blood parameters data supported the hypothesis that alterations in physiologic homeostasis exist in CFS patients and the urine excretion parameters revealed a number of anomalies.
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Association between omega-3 index and blood lipids in older Australians
Jessica J. A. Ferguson,Martin Veysey,Mark Lucock,Suzanne Niblett,Katrina King,Lesley MacDonald-Wicks,Manohar L. Garg +6 more
TL;DR: The findings support the development and implementation of age-specific dietary strategies to reduce the risk of CVD via improving the O3I and long-term n-3 PUFA status is associated with blood lipid profiles in older Australians.
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Reduced plasma homocysteine levels in elderly Australians following mandatory folic acid fortification – A comparison of two cross-sectional cohorts
Emma L. Beckett,Charlotte Martin,Lyndell Boyd,Teagan Porter,Katrina King,Suzanne Niblett,Zoe Yates,Martin Veysey,Mark Lucock +8 more
TL;DR: A potential off-target benefit of mandatory folic acid fortification in Australia was demonstrated, and with many countries still considering the merits and consequences of mandatory fortification policies, it is important to unravel the off- target effects including dietary context.
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Temperature profiles of antibiotic-containing elastomeric infusion devices used by ambulatory care patients.
TL;DR: Antibiotics administered to HITH patients via continuous infusion were frequently exposed to temperatures in excess of 25 °C, which challenges the validity of current fixed‐temperature models for testing stability, which do not reflect conditions found in clinical practice.
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Retirement Health and Lifestyle Study: Australian Neighborhood Environments and Physical Activity in Older Adults:
Cheryl Travers,Andrew J Dixon,Alice Laurence,Suzanne Niblett,Katrina King,Peter Lewis,Neville Owen,Martin Veysey +7 more
TL;DR: Although retirement village residents lived in more highly walkable environments, they did not walk more and their overall levels of physical activity were lower than those of community residents.
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