Barbora de Courten
RMIT University, VIC, Australia
- This delegate is presenting an abstract at this event.
Professor Barbora de Courten is a professor at Monash Centre for Research and Implementation, School of Public Health, Monash University. She a general physician with experience in clinical research, epidemiology and public health in the area of non-communicable disease in particular in obesity, type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular diseases. Her research focuses on chronic low-grade inflammation as a predictor of obesity, type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular diseases and novel preventive interventions that can modulate risk for diabetes and cardiovascular diseases via reduction in chronic inflammation and advanced glycation.
Barbora described 17 predictors and 4 genetic determinants of obesity, insulin resistance and diabetes, elucidated pathways by which chronic low-grade inflammation causes diabetes and their relative contribution in humans. More recently, she investigated anti-inflammatory therapy, diet low in advanced glycation endproducts, vitamin D and carnosine supplementation as strategies to reduce risk for diabetes and cardiovascular disease.
Barbora is involved in national and interventional peer review, is on Editorial boards of 3 journals and NHMRC and DART grant review panels. She is also an active member of Australian National Diabetes Audit (ANDA) Advisory Group and Eli Lilly Innovation Advisory group.
Presentations this author is a contributor to:
Salicylates intervention improves several cardiometabolic outcomes: meta-analysis of RCTs (#249)
2:00 PM
Estifanos Baye
ADS Clinical Poster Session - Prevention of type 2 diabetes
Time series modelling to forecast prehospital Emergency Medical Service demand for diabetic emergencies (#272)
2:00 PM
Melanie Villani
ADS Clinical Poster Session - Epidemiology
Vitamin D is associated with adiposity and cardiometabolic risk factors in a predominantly vitamin D-deficient and overweight/obese but otherwise healthy cohort (#243)
2:00 PM
Aya Mousa
ADS Clinical Poster Session - Nutrition
Higher glomerular filtration rate is related to insulin resistance independently of obesity in healthy non-diabetic adults (#180)
12:00 PM
Negar Naderpoor
ADS Clinical Orals - Obesity & Diabetes