Erratum: Combining body mass index with measures of central obesity in the assessment of mortality in subjects with coronary disease: Role of normal weight central obesity (Journal of the American College of Cardiology (2013) 61 (553-560))
Thais Coutinho,Kashish Goel,D. Corrêa De Sa,Rickey E. Carter,D.O. Hodge,Charlotte Kragelund,Alka M. Kanaya,Marianne Zeller,Jong Seon Park,Lars Kober,Christian Torp-Pedersen,Yves Cottin,Luc Lorgis,Sang-Hee Lee,Young Jo Kim,Randal J. Thomas,Véronique L. Roger,Virend K. Somers,Francisco Lopez-Jimenez +18 more
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About: This article is published in Journal of the American College of Cardiology. The article was published on 16 Jul 2013. and is currently open access. The article focuses on the topics: Body mass index & Obesity.
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Citations
Is BMI accurate to reflect true adiposity
Lili Yang,Min Zhao,Bo Xi +2 more
TL;DR: Two large cohorts suggested that normal-weight central obesity (normal BMI but abnormal waist to hip ratio) is associated with highest mortality, which underlined the more importance of central obesity defined by waist index than general Obesity defined by BMI.
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References
Is BMI accurate to reflect true adiposity
Lili Yang,Min Zhao,Bo Xi +2 more
TL;DR: Two large cohorts suggested that normal-weight central obesity (normal BMI but abnormal waist to hip ratio) is associated with highest mortality, which underlined the more importance of central obesity defined by waist index than general Obesity defined by BMI.
8