304 Papers
2.4K Citations
Marinos Elia is an academic researcher from University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Malnutrition. The author has an hindex of 63, co-authored 297 publications. Previous affiliations of Marinos Elia include University of Southampton & Medical Research Council.
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Papers
Plasma leptin, energy intake and hunger following total hip replacement surgery.
TL;DR: It is concluded that circulating leptin is involved in the early (< 24 h) acute-phase response after moderately severe surgical trauma (characterized biochemically by a substantial acute- phase protein response, hypoalbuminaemia, hyperglycaemia and hypoglutaminaemia).
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Fetal programming of body dimensions and percentage body fat measured in prepubertal children with a 4-component model of body composition, dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry, deuterium dilution, densitometry, and skinfold thicknesses
TL;DR: Consistent trends across body-composition measurement techniques add strength to the suggestion that percentage fat in prepubertal children is programmed in utero (independently of body build and BMI), and suggests birth weight is a better predictor of prepuberal height than is self-reported midparental height.
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Effect of an acute fast on energy compensation and feeding behaviour in lean men and women
Alexandra M. Johnstone,Peter Faber,Eileen R. Gibney,Marinos Elia,Graham W. Horgan,BE Golden,R. J. Stubbs +6 more
TL;DR: The data suggest that a 36 h fast, which generated a negative energy balance of ∼12 MJ, did not induce a powerful, unconditioned stimulus to compensate on the subsequent day.
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Short-Term Continuous Enteral Tube Feeding Schedules Did Not Suppress Appetite and Food Intake in Healthy Men in a Placebo-Controlled Trial
TL;DR: It is suggested that continuous TF has little effect on satiety in healthy men over a period of 3 d, irrespective of the timing of the schedule, which could not be explained by changes in a variety of metabolic and hormonal signals within the time frame studied.
Cost-effectiveness of oral nutritional supplements in older malnourished care home residents
TL;DR: This pragmatic randomised trial involving one of the oldest populations subjected to a cost-utility analysis, suggests that use of oral nutritional supplements in care homes are cost-effective relative to dietary advice.
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