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List of works by Chiara Donfrancesco

Association of Cardiometabolic Multimorbidity With Mortality

scientific article

Cardiac Troponin I and Incident Stroke in European Cohorts: Insights From the BiomarCaRE Project

scientific article published on 19 August 2020

Correction: Impact of Age and Gender on the Prevalence and Prognostic Importance of the Metabolic Syndrome and Its Components in Europeans. The MORGAM Prospective Cohort Project

scientific article published on 15 May 2015

Do other cardiovascular risk factors influence the impact of age on the association between blood pressure and mortality? The MORGAM Project

scientific article published on May 2014

Excess dietary sodium and inadequate potassium intake in Italy: Results of the MINISAL study

scientific article published on July 25, 2012

Impact of age and gender on the prevalence and prognostic importance of the metabolic syndrome and its components in Europeans. The MORGAM Prospective Cohort Project

scientific article

Impact of age on the importance of systolic and diastolic blood pressures for stroke risk: the MOnica, Risk, Genetics, Archiving, and Monograph (MORGAM) Project

scientific article published on 24 September 2012

Seasonality of cardiovascular risk factors: an analysis including over 230 000 participants in 15 countries

scientific article published on 30 May 2014

The Perceived Health Status from Young Adults to Elderly: Results of the MEHM Questionnaire within the CUORE Project Survey 2008-2012

scientific article published on 25 August 2020

The Role of COVID-19 in the Death of SARS-CoV-2-Positive Patients: A Study Based on Death Certificates

scientific article published on 27 October 2020

Use of Repeated Blood Pressure and Cholesterol Measurements to Improve Cardiovascular Disease Risk Prediction: An Individual-Participant-Data Meta-Analysis

scientific article

Worldwide trends in hypertension prevalence and progress in treatment and control from 1990 to 2019: a pooled analysis of 1201 population-representative studies with 104 million participants

scholarly article