Cite
IgA Anti-transglutaminase Autoantibodies at Type1 Diabetes Onset Are Less Frequent in Adult Patients and Are Associated With a General Celiac-Specific Lower Immune Response in Comparison With Nondiabetic Celiac Patients at Diagnosis.
MLA
Tiberti, Claudio, et al. “IgA Anti-Transglutaminase Autoantibodies at Type1 Diabetes Onset Are Less Frequent in Adult Patients and Are Associated With a General Celiac-Specific Lower Immune Response in Comparison With Nondiabetic Celiac Patients at Diagnosis.” Diabetes Care, vol. 35, no. 10, Oct. 2012, pp. 2083–85. EBSCOhost, https://doi.org/10.2337/dc11-2171.
APA
Tiberti, C., Panimolle, F., Bonamico, M., Shashaj, B., Filardi, T., Lucantoni, F., Nenna, R., Costantino, F., Lenzi, A., & Morano, S. (2012). IgA Anti-transglutaminase Autoantibodies at Type1 Diabetes Onset Are Less Frequent in Adult Patients and Are Associated With a General Celiac-Specific Lower Immune Response in Comparison With Nondiabetic Celiac Patients at Diagnosis. Diabetes Care, 35(10), 2083–2085. https://doi.org/10.2337/dc11-2171
Chicago
Tiberti, Claudio, Francesca Panimolle, Margherita Bonamico, Blegina Shashaj, Tiziana Filardi, Federica Lucantoni, Raffaella Nenna, Francesco Costantino, Andrea Lenzi, and Susanna Morano. 2012. “IgA Anti-Transglutaminase Autoantibodies at Type1 Diabetes Onset Are Less Frequent in Adult Patients and Are Associated With a General Celiac-Specific Lower Immune Response in Comparison With Nondiabetic Celiac Patients at Diagnosis.” Diabetes Care 35 (10): 2083–85. doi:10.2337/dc11-2171.