What the study found
The provided abstract does not report the study’s findings or conclusions.
Why the authors say this matters
The abstract does not include any stated relevance, implications, or conclusions.
What the researchers tested
The title suggests the study examined dominant food patterns and intake of energy and macronutrients in relation to endometriosis in women aged 15–45. The abstract provided here contains only ethics approval information and does not describe the research design, sample, or measurements.
What worked and what didn't
No results are described in the available abstract, so there is nothing to summarize about what was associated with endometriosis or not.
What to keep in mind
The available text is incomplete for summarization because it does not include an abstract beyond ethics and authorship details. Limitations are not described in the provided summary.
Key points
- The title indicates a study on food patterns, energy intake, macronutrient intake, and endometriosis.
- The target group named in the title is women aged 15–45.
- The provided abstract contains ethics approval information but no study results.
- No implications, conclusions, or limitations are stated in the available abstract.
Disclosure
- Research title:
- No findings are provided in the abstract
- Authors:
- Maryam Aminian, Tahereh Behroozi-lak, Negin Ahmadi, Sevana Daneghian
- Institutions:
- Urmia University, Urmia University of Medical Sciences
- Publication date:
- 2026-02-10
- OpenAlex record:
- View
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