Connection

Co-Authors

This is a "connection" page, showing publications co-authored by Luigi Di Filippo and Patrizia Rovere-Querini.
Connection Strength

2.136
  1. Vitamin D Levels Are Associated With Blood Glucose and BMI in COVID-19 Patients, Predicting Disease Severity. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2022 01 01; 107(1):e348-e360.
    View in: PubMed
    Score: 0.247
  2. Weight trajectories and abdominal adiposity in COVID-19 survivors with overweight/obesity. Int J Obes (Lond). 2021 09; 45(9):1986-1994.
    View in: PubMed
    Score: 0.236
  3. Epicardial adipose tissue characteristics, obesity and clinical outcomes in COVID-19: A post-hoc analysis of a prospective cohort study. Nutr Metab Cardiovasc Dis. 2021 06 30; 31(7):2156-2164.
    View in: PubMed
    Score: 0.236
  4. Radiological Thoracic Vertebral Fractures are Highly Prevalent in COVID-19 and Predict Disease Outcomes. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2021 01 23; 106(2):e602-e614.
    View in: PubMed
    Score: 0.231
  5. Hypocalcemia is a distinctive biochemical feature of hospitalized COVID-19 patients. Endocrine. 2021 01; 71(1):9-13.
    View in: PubMed
    Score: 0.228
  6. COVID-19 is associated with clinically significant weight loss and risk of malnutrition, independent of hospitalisation: A post-hoc analysis of a prospective cohort study. Clin Nutr. 2021 04; 40(4):2420-2426.
    View in: PubMed
    Score: 0.228
  7. Biobanking for COVID-19 research. Panminerva Med. 2020 Oct 19.
    View in: PubMed
    Score: 0.227
  8. COVID-19: Pharmacology and kinetics of viral clearance. Pharmacol Res. 2020 11; 161:105114.
    View in: PubMed
    Score: 0.224
  9. Hypocalcemia is highly prevalent and predicts hospitalization in patients with COVID-19. Endocrine. 2020 06; 68(3):475-478.
    View in: PubMed
    Score: 0.222
  10. Antibody response to multiple antigens of SARS-CoV-2 in patients with diabetes: an observational cohort study. Diabetologia. 2020 12; 63(12):2548-2558.
    View in: PubMed
    Score: 0.057
Connection Strength

The connection strength for concepts is the sum of the scores for each matching publication.

Publication scores are based on many factors, including how long ago they were written and whether the person is a first or senior author.