Cite
Long-standing type 1 diabetes: patients with adult-onset develop celiac-specific immunoreactivity more frequently than patients with childhood-onset diabetes, in a disease duration-dependent manner.
MLA
Tiberti, Claudio, et al. “Long-Standing Type 1 Diabetes: Patients with Adult-Onset Develop Celiac-Specific Immunoreactivity More Frequently than Patients with Childhood-Onset Diabetes, in a Disease Duration-Dependent Manner.” Acta Diabetologica, vol. 51, no. 4, Aug. 2014, pp. 675–78. EBSCOhost, https://doi.org/10.1007/s00592-013-0536-0.
APA
Tiberti, C., Panimolle, F., Bonamico, M., Filardi, T., Pallotta, L., Nenna, R., Pontone, S., Dotta, F., Pugliese, G., Lenzi, A., Balducci, S., & Morano, S. (2014). Long-standing type 1 diabetes: patients with adult-onset develop celiac-specific immunoreactivity more frequently than patients with childhood-onset diabetes, in a disease duration-dependent manner. Acta Diabetologica, 51(4), 675–678. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00592-013-0536-0
Chicago
Tiberti, Claudio, Francesca Panimolle, Margherita Bonamico, Tiziana Filardi, Lucia Pallotta, Raffaella Nenna, Stefano Pontone, et al. 2014. “Long-Standing Type 1 Diabetes: Patients with Adult-Onset Develop Celiac-Specific Immunoreactivity More Frequently than Patients with Childhood-Onset Diabetes, in a Disease Duration-Dependent Manner.” Acta Diabetologica 51 (4): 675–78. doi:10.1007/s00592-013-0536-0.