Metabolic Profiling of Obesity With and Without the Metabolic Syndrome - A Multi-Sample Evaluation : Supplementary material
SND-ID: 2024-336. Version: 1. DOI: https://doi.org/10.57804/aw8w-wa10
Download data
Citation
Creator/Principal investigator(s)
Lars Lind - Uppsala University, Department of Medical Sciences, Clinical Epidemiology
Samira Salihovic - Örebro University, Inflammatory Response and Infection Susceptibility Centre
Johan Sundström - Uppsala University, Department of Medical Sciences, Clinical Epidemiology
Sölve Elmståhl - Lund University, Department of Clinical Sciences, Division of Geriatric Medicin
Ulf Hammar - Uppsala University, Department of Medical Sciences, Molecular epidemiology
... Show more..Lars Lind - Uppsala University, Department of Medical Sciences, Clinical Epidemiology
Samira Salihovic - Örebro University, Inflammatory Response and Infection Susceptibility Centre
Johan Sundström - Uppsala University, Department of Medical Sciences, Clinical Epidemiology
Sölve Elmståhl - Lund University, Department of Clinical Sciences, Division of Geriatric Medicin
Ulf Hammar - Uppsala University, Department of Medical Sciences, Molecular epidemiology
Koen Dekkers - Uppsala University, Department of Medical Sciences, Molecular epidemiology
Johan Ärnlöv - Karolinska Institutet / Dalarna University, Department of Neurobiology / Department of Health and Welfare
J. Gustav Smith - Lund University and Skåne University Hospital / Gothenburg University and the Department of Cardiology, Sahlgrenska University Hospital, Department of Cardiology / The Wallenberg Laboratory Department of Molecular and Clinical Medicine / Wallenberg Center for Molecular Medicine and Lund University Diabetes Center
Gunnar Engström - Lund University, Department of Clinical Sciences
Tove Fall - Uppsala University, Department of Medical Sciences, Molecular epidemiology
Show less..Research principal
Description
Pdf file with a total of 5 Supplementary Tables:
Supplementary Table 1. An overview of metabolite differences between certain groups.
Supplementary Table 2. Pathway enrichment and topographical analysis for the 427 validated metabolites that differed between obese subjects without MetS and normal-weight without MetS.
Supplementary Table 3. Pathway enrichment and topographical analysis for the 196 validated metabolites that differed between obese subjects with and without MetS.
Supplementary Table 4. Relationships between metabolites and BMI and number of MetS components in the continuous analysis.
Supplementary Table 5. Pathway enrichment and topographical analysis for the 371 validated metabolites that differed between overweight subjects without MetS and normal-weight without MetS.
Supplementary Table 6. Pathway enrichment and topographical analysis for the 417 metabolites being related to BMI in subjects with no MetS components.
Pdf file revised 211202. The old version is archived.
Supplementary Table 1. An overview of metabolite differences between certain groups.
Supplementary Table 2. Pathway enrichment and topographical analysis for the 427 validated metabolites that differed between obese subjects without MetS and normal-weight without MetS.
Supplementary Table 3. Pathway enrichment and topographical analysis for the 196 validated metabolites that differed between obese subjects with and without MetS.
Supplementary Table 4. Relationships between metabolites and BMI and number of MetS components in the continuous analysis.
Supplementary Table 5. Pathway enrichment and topographical analysis for the 371 validated metabolites that differed between overweight subjects without MetS and normal-weight without MetS.
Supplementary Table 6. Pathway enrichment and topographical analysis for the 417 metabolites being related to BMI in subjects with no MetS components.
Pdf file revised 211202. The old version is archived.
The dataset was originally published in DiVA and moved to SND in 2024. Show less..
Data contains personal data
No
Language
Identifiers
Research area
Endocrinology and diabetes (Standard för svensk indelning av forskningsämnen 2011)