Zhaoyuan Li
RMIT University
9 Papers
5 Citations
Zhaoyuan Li is an academic researcher from RMIT University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Internal medicine. The author has co-authored 1 publications.
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Papers
Association of Short-Term Exposure to PM2.5 with Blood Lipids and the Modification Effects of Insulin Resistance: A Panel Study in Wuhan
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors investigated the impact of fine particulate matter (PM2.5) exposure on blood lipids and estimated the modifying role of insulin resistance, reflected by the homeostasis model assessment of diabetes (HOMA-IR).
The effect of short-term fine particulate matter exposure on glucose homeostasis: A panel study in healthy adults
TL;DR: Wang et al. as mentioned in this paper investigated the short-term association between PM2.5 exposure and glucose homeostasis among the healthy populations, and found that exposure to PM 2.5 for shortterm, even within hours, was positively associated with elevated IR status and impaired glucose normalization in the healthy population.
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Ambient ozone pollution impairs glucose homeostasis and contributes to renal function decline: Population-based evidence.
Shouxin Peng,Bingbing Chen,Zhaoyuan Li,Jinhui Sun,Feifei Liu,Xiaoyi Yin,Yi Zhou,Huanfeng Shen,Hao Xiang +8 more
TL;DR: The findings indicated that higher ozone pollution could affect renal function, and the hyperglycemia and insulin resistance linked to ozone might be the underlying mechanisms.
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Long-term exposure to varying-sized particulate matters and kidney disease in middle-aged and elder adults: A 8-year nationwide cohort study in China.
Shouxin Peng,Xiaoyi Yin,Gongbo Chen,Jinhui Sun,Bingbing Chen,Yi Zhou,Zhaoyuan Li,Feifei Liu,Hao Xiang +8 more
TL;DR: Higher PMs pollution was associated with the increased risk of kidney disease development in China, and Stratified analyses indicated the elder, overweight persons, smokers, respiratory patients and urban residents were more vulnerable toPMs pollution than their counterparts.
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Associations between cold spells of different time types and coronary heart disease severity
Zhaoyuan Li,Jing Wan,Shouxin Peng,Ruonan Wang,Zhongli Dai,Cuiyi Liu,Yujia Feng,Hao Xiang +7 more
TL;DR: Exposure to cold spells was positively associated with CHD severity, especially the nighttime cold spells, and the association between cold spells and CHD severity was more significant in high levels of PM2.5 and low levels of greenness.
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