9 Papers
107 Citations
M. Lu is an academic researcher from University of Oklahoma. The author has contributed to research in topics: Diabetes mellitus & Vascular disease. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 7 publications.
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Papers
Risk factors for renal failure: The WHO Multinational Study of Vascular Disease in Diabetes
Helen M. Colhoun,Elisa T. Lee,Peter H. Bennett,M. Lu,Harry Keen,Szu-Han Wang,L. K. Stevens,J. H. Fuller +7 more
TL;DR: The role of proteinuria and retinopathy as markers of renal failure and the importance of hyperglycaemia in renal failure in Type I and Type II diabetes are confirmed.
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Epidemiology of autism spectrum disorders: Global burden of disease 2019 and bibliometric analysis of risk factors
Yang-An Li,Ze-Jian Chen,Xiao-dan Li,Ming-Hui Gu,Nan Xia,Chen Gong,Zhaoe Zhou,Gvzalnur Yasin,Hao-Yu Xie,Xiupan Wei,Yali Liu,Xiao-hua Han,M. Lu,Jiang Xu,Xiaolin Huang +14 more
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors explore the geographical pattern and temporal trend of autism spectrum disorders (ASD) epidemiology from 1990 to 2019, and perform a bibliometric analysis of risk factors for ASD.
The incidence of visual impairment and its determinants in the WHO Multinational Study of Vascular Disease in Diabetes.
TL;DR: Comparisons of incident severeVisual impairment between centres are restricted by selective mortality, low incidence rates and relatively small numbers in each centre but before retinopathy, baseline systolic pressure and cholesterol predicted severe visual impairment.
Vascular disease prevalence in diabetic patients in China: standardised comparison with the 14 centres in the WHO multinational study of vascular disease in diabetes
TL;DR: Relatively low arterial pressures and blood cholesterol are likely contributors to the notablyLow arterial disease rates in this Chinese diabetic cohort; they reflect low rates in the Chinese mainland general population and resemble the Tokyo and Hong Kong centres of the WHO MSVDD.
Risk factors, ethnic differences and mortality associated with lower-extremity gangrene and amputation in diabetes. The WHO multinational study of vascular disease in diabetes
TL;DR: Vascular complications and their risk factors are themselves risk factors for amputation in both Type I and Type II diabetes and are common to several geographical regions worldwide, however, reasons for differences between geographical regions and the degree to which different health care systems could be responsible is not clear.