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  1. Article: Hemoglobin S/O

    Sanders, Riley / Ly, Victoria / Ahmad, Kinza / Swift, Jesse / Sallam, Ahmed / Uwaydat, Sami

    Case reports in ophthalmology

    2020  Volume 11, Issue 2, Page(s) 189–195

    Abstract: Hemoglobin S/OArab (Hgb S/OArab) disease is a rare hemoglobinopathy ... retinal findings. In this report, we present ophthalmic examination findings in 2 patients with Hgb S/O ... of retinal arterial occlusive disease in Hgb S/OArab, and the first report of fundus autofluorescence and ...

    Abstract Hemoglobin S/O<sub>Arab</sub> (Hgb S/O<sub>Arab</sub>) disease is a rare hemoglobinopathy which presents similarly to sickle cell retinopathy, with only three prior reports that describe associated retinal findings. In this report, we present ophthalmic examination findings in 2 patients with Hgb S/O<sub>Arab</sub>. One patient exhibited peripheral ischemia and sunburst lesions without neovascular disease, and the other patient developed proliferative retinopathy of both eyes and multiple posterior-pole branch retinal artery occlusions in one eye. To our knowledge, this is the first case of retinal arterial occlusive disease in Hgb S/O<sub>Arab</sub>, and the first report of fundus autofluorescence and OCT angiography in Hgb/O<sub>Arab</sub> retinopathy.
    Language English
    Publishing date 2020-05-27
    Publishing country Switzerland
    Document type Case Reports
    ZDB-ID 2577666-6
    ISSN 1663-2699
    ISSN 1663-2699
    DOI 10.1159/000507879
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  2. Article: D-type cyclins regulate DNA mismatch repair in the G1 and S phases of the cell cycle, maintaining genome stability.

    Rona, Gergely / Miwatani-Minter, Bearach / Zhang, Qingyue / Goldberg, Hailey V / Kerzhnerman, Marc A / Howard, Jesse B / Simoneschi, Daniele / Lane, Ethan / Hobbs, John W / Sassani, Elizabeth / Wang, Andrew A / Keegan, Sarah / Laverty, Daniel J / Piett, Cortt G / Pongor, Lorinc S / Xu, Miranda Li / Andrade, Joshua / Thomas, Anish / Sicinski, Piotr /
    Askenazi, Manor / Ueberheide, Beatrix / Fenyö, David / Nagel, Zachary D / Pagano, Michele

    bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology

    2024  

    Abstract: The large majority of oxidative DNA lesions occurring in the G1 phase of the cell cycle are repaired by base excision repair (BER) rather than mismatch repair (MMR) to avoid long resections that can lead to genomic instability and cell death. However, ... ...

    Abstract The large majority of oxidative DNA lesions occurring in the G1 phase of the cell cycle are repaired by base excision repair (BER) rather than mismatch repair (MMR) to avoid long resections that can lead to genomic instability and cell death. However, the molecular mechanisms dictating pathway choice between MMR and BER have remained unknown. Here, we show that, during G1, D-type cyclins are recruited to sites of oxidative DNA damage in a PCNA- and p21-dependent manner. D-type cyclins shield p21 from its two ubiquitin ligases CRL1
    Language English
    Publishing date 2024-01-13
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Preprint
    DOI 10.1101/2024.01.12.575420
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  3. Article ; Online: A High-Nuclearity Copper Sulfide Nanocluster [S-Cu

    Xu, Cheng / Jin, Yuhao / Fang, Hao / Zheng, Huijuan / Carozza, Jesse C / Pan, Yanxiong / Wei, Ping-Jie / Zhang, Zhenyi / Wei, Zheng / Zhou, Zheng / Han, Haixiang

    Journal of the American Chemical Society

    2023  Volume 145, Issue 47, Page(s) 25673–25685

    Abstract: ... an acid-assisted thiolate dissociation approach that employs suitable acid to induce cleavage of the S-C ... bonds in the Cu-S-R (R = alkyl) precursor, spontaneously fostering the formation of the [Cu-S-Cu ...

    Abstract This work represents an important step in the quest for creating atomically precise binary semiconductor nanoclusters (BS-NCs). Compared with coinage metal NCs, the preparation of BS-NCs requires strict control of the reaction kinetics to guarantee the formation of an atomically precise single phase under mild conditions, which otherwise could lead to the generation of multiple phases. Herein, we developed an acid-assisted thiolate dissociation approach that employs suitable acid to induce cleavage of the S-C bonds in the Cu-S-R (R = alkyl) precursor, spontaneously fostering the formation of the [Cu-S-Cu] skeleton upon the addition of extra Cu sources. Through this method, a high-nuclearity copper sulfide nanocluster, Cu
    Language English
    Publishing date 2023-10-27
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 3155-0
    ISSN 1520-5126 ; 0002-7863
    ISSN (online) 1520-5126
    ISSN 0002-7863
    DOI 10.1021/jacs.3c08549
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  4. Book ; Online: Are Changing Constituencies Driving Rising Polarization in the U.S. House of Representatives?

    Sussell, Jesse / Thomson, James A

    2015  

    Keywords Probability & statistics ; Politics & government ; Population & demography ; Population Studies ; Statistics ; Political Science
    Language English
    Size 1 Online-Ressource
    Publisher RAND Corporation
    Document type Book ; Online
    Note English
    HBZ-ID HT030612155
    ISBN 9780833088642 ; 0833088645
    Database ZB MED Catalogue: Medicine, Health, Nutrition, Environment, Agriculture

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  5. Article ; Online: Development of a Broth Microdilution Method To Characterize Chlorhexidine MICs among Bacteria Collected from 2005 to 2019 at Three U.S. Sites.

    Lutgring, Joseph D / Grass, Julian E / Lonsway, David / Yoo, Brian B / Epson, Erin / Crumpler, Megan / Galliher, Karen / O'Donnell, Kathleen / Zahn, Matthew / Evans, Eric / Jacob, Jesse T / Page, Alexander / Satola, Sarah W / Smith, Gillian / Kainer, Marion / Muleta, Daniel / Wilson, Christopher D / Hayden, Mary K / Reddy, Sujan /
    Elkins, Christopher A / Rasheed, J Kamile / Karlsson, Maria / Magill, Shelley S / Guh, Alice Y

    Microbiology spectrum

    2023  Volume 11, Issue 3, Page(s) e0413422

    Abstract: ... by many U.S. hospitals, but increasing chlorhexidine use has raised concerns about possible emergence ... and Enterobacter cloacae complex isolates collected at three U.S. sites. Chlorhexidine MICs were ... determined for 535 isolates including 129 S. aureus, 156 E. coli, 142 K. pneumoniae, and 108 E. cloacae ...

    Abstract Chlorhexidine bathing to prevent transmission of multidrug-resistant organisms has been adopted by many U.S. hospitals, but increasing chlorhexidine use has raised concerns about possible emergence of resistance. We sought to establish a broth microdilution method for determining chlorhexidine MICs and then used the method to evaluate chlorhexidine MICs for bacteria that can cause health care-associated infections. We adapted a broth microdilution method for determining chlorhexidine MICs, poured panels, established quality control ranges, and tested Staphylococcus aureus, Escherichia coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae, and Enterobacter cloacae complex isolates collected at three U.S. sites. Chlorhexidine MICs were determined for 535 isolates including 129 S. aureus, 156 E. coli, 142 K. pneumoniae, and 108 E. cloacae complex isolates. The respective MIC distributions for each species ranged from 1 to 8 mg/L (MIC
    MeSH term(s) Anti-Bacterial Agents/pharmacology ; Anti-Bacterial Agents/therapeutic use ; Chlorhexidine/pharmacology ; Staphylococcus aureus ; Escherichia coli ; Bacteria ; Klebsiella pneumoniae ; Microbial Sensitivity Tests
    Chemical Substances Anti-Bacterial Agents ; Chlorhexidine (R4KO0DY52L)
    Language English
    Publishing date 2023-04-17
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article ; Research Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S.
    ZDB-ID 2807133-5
    ISSN 2165-0497 ; 2165-0497
    ISSN (online) 2165-0497
    ISSN 2165-0497
    DOI 10.1128/spectrum.04134-22
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  6. Article ; Online: School-based Sex Education in the U.S. at a Crossroads: Taking the Right Path.

    Santelli, John S / Bell, David L / Trent, Maria / Klein, Jonathan D / Grubb, Laura / Barondeau, Jesse / Stager, Margaret / North, Steve

    The Journal of adolescent health : official publication of the Society for Adolescent Medicine

    2021  Volume 69, Issue 6, Page(s) 886–890

    MeSH term(s) Humans ; Risk-Taking ; Schools ; Sex Education ; United States
    Language English
    Publishing date 2021-10-16
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 1063374-1
    ISSN 1879-1972 ; 1054-139X
    ISSN (online) 1879-1972
    ISSN 1054-139X
    DOI 10.1016/j.jadohealth.2021.09.007
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  7. Book ; Online: $\lambda_S$

    Sherman, Benjamin / Michel, Jesse / Carbin, Michael

    Computable Semantics for Differentiable Programming with Higher-Order Functions and Datatypes

    2020  

    Abstract: ... them to differentiable code. We present a differentiable programming language, $\lambda_S$, that is the first to deliver ... functions. Together, these features enable $\lambda_S$ to expose differentiable, higher-order functions ... we implement $\lambda_S$ as an embedded language in Haskell. We use $\lambda_S$ to construct novel ...

    Abstract Deep learning is moving towards increasingly sophisticated optimization objectives that employ higher-order functions, such as integration, continuous optimization, and root-finding. Since differentiable programming frameworks such as PyTorch and TensorFlow do not have first-class representations of these functions, developers must reason about the semantics of such objectives and manually translate them to differentiable code. We present a differentiable programming language, $\lambda_S$, that is the first to deliver a semantics for higher-order functions, higher-order derivatives, and Lipschitz but nondifferentiable functions. Together, these features enable $\lambda_S$ to expose differentiable, higher-order functions for integration, optimization, and root-finding as first-class functions with automatically computed derivatives. $\lambda_S$'s semantics is computable, meaning that values can be computed to arbitrary precision, and we implement $\lambda_S$ as an embedded language in Haskell. We use $\lambda_S$ to construct novel differentiable libraries for representing probability distributions, implicit surfaces, and generalized parametric surfaces -- all as instances of higher-order datatypes -- and present case studies that rely on computing the derivatives of these higher-order functions and datatypes. In addition to modeling existing differentiable algorithms, such as a differentiable ray tracer for implicit surfaces, without requiring any user-level differentiation code, we demonstrate new differentiable algorithms, such as the Hausdorff distance of generalized parametric surfaces.

    Comment: 31 pages, 10 figures
    Keywords Computer Science - Programming Languages ; Computer Science - Logic in Computer Science ; D.3.1 ; F.3.2
    Subject code 005
    Publishing date 2020-07-15
    Publishing country us
    Document type Book ; Online
    Database BASE - Bielefeld Academic Search Engine (life sciences selection)

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  8. Article: A Bacteriological Comparison of the Hemolymph from Healthy and Moribund Unionid Mussel Populations in the Upper Midwestern U.S.A. Prompts the Development of Diagnostic Assays to Detect

    Leis, Eric M / Dziki, Sara / Standish, Isaac / Waller, Diane / Richard, Jordan / Weinzinger, Jesse / Harris, Cleyo / Knowles, Susan / Goldberg, Tony

    Microorganisms

    2023  Volume 11, Issue 4

    Abstract: Recent bacteriological investigations of freshwater mussel mortality events in the southeastern United States have identified a variety of bacteria and differences in bacterial communities between sick and healthy mussels. In particular, ...

    Abstract Recent bacteriological investigations of freshwater mussel mortality events in the southeastern United States have identified a variety of bacteria and differences in bacterial communities between sick and healthy mussels. In particular,
    Language English
    Publishing date 2023-04-19
    Publishing country Switzerland
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2720891-6
    ISSN 2076-2607
    ISSN 2076-2607
    DOI 10.3390/microorganisms11041068
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  9. Article ; Online: Travel-Related Diagnoses Among U.S. Nonmigrant Travelers or Migrants Presenting to U.S. GeoSentinel Sites - GeoSentinel Network, 2012-2021.

    Brown, Ashley B / Miller, Charles / Hamer, Davidson H / Kozarsky, Phyllis / Libman, Michael / Huits, Ralph / Rizwan, Aisha / Emetulu, Hannah / Waggoner, Jesse / Chen, Lin H / Leung, Daniel T / Bourque, Daniel / Connor, Bradley A / Licitra, Carmelo / Angelo, Kristina M

    Morbidity and mortality weekly report. Surveillance summaries (Washington, D.C. : 2002)

    2023  Volume 72, Issue 7, Page(s) 1–22

    Abstract: ... that might affect travelers. This report summarizes data from 20 U.S. GeoSentinel sites and reports on the detection ... of which 17,389 lived in the United States and were evaluated by a clinician at a U.S. site after travel ... <19 years to 93 years); 47.3% were female, and 6.0% were U.S. citizens. A majority (89.8%) were seen ...

    Abstract Problem/condition: During 2012-2021, the volume of international travel reached record highs and lows. This period also was marked by the emergence or large outbreaks of multiple infectious diseases (e.g., Zika virus, yellow fever, and COVID-19). Over time, the growing ease and increased frequency of travel has resulted in the unprecedented global spread of infectious diseases. Detecting infectious diseases and other diagnoses among travelers can serve as sentinel surveillance for new or emerging pathogens and provide information to improve case identification, clinical management, and public health prevention and response.
    Reporting period: 2012-2021.
    Description of system: Established in 1995, the GeoSentinel Network (GeoSentinel), a collaboration between CDC and the International Society of Travel Medicine, is a global, clinical-care-based surveillance and research network of travel and tropical medicine sites that monitors infectious diseases and other adverse health events that affect international travelers. GeoSentinel comprises 71 sites in 29 countries where clinicians diagnose illnesses and collect demographic, clinical, and travel-related information about diseases and illnesses acquired during travel using a standardized report form. Data are collected electronically via a secure CDC database, and daily reports are generated for assistance in detecting sentinel events (i.e., unusual patterns or clusters of disease). GeoSentinel sites collaborate to report disease or population-specific findings through retrospective database analyses and the collection of supplemental data to fill specific knowledge gaps. GeoSentinel also serves as a communications network by using internal notifications, ProMed alerts, and peer-reviewed publications to alert clinicians and public health professionals about global outbreaks and events that might affect travelers. This report summarizes data from 20 U.S. GeoSentinel sites and reports on the detection of three worldwide events that demonstrate GeoSentinel's notification capability.
    Results: During 2012-2021, data were collected by all GeoSentinel sites on approximately 200,000 patients who had approximately 244,000 confirmed or probable travel-related diagnoses. Twenty GeoSentinel sites from the United States contributed records during the 10-year surveillance period, submitting data on 18,336 patients, of which 17,389 lived in the United States and were evaluated by a clinician at a U.S. site after travel. Of those patients, 7,530 (43.3%) were recent migrants to the United States, and 9,859 (56.7%) were returning nonmigrant travelers.Among the recent migrants to the United States, the median age was 28.5 years (range = <19 years to 93 years); 47.3% were female, and 6.0% were U.S. citizens. A majority (89.8%) were seen as outpatients, and among 4,672 migrants with information available, 4,148 (88.8%) did not receive pretravel health information. Of 13,986 diagnoses among migrants, the most frequent were vitamin D deficiency (20.2%), Blastocystis (10.9%), and latent tuberculosis (10.3%). Malaria was diagnosed in 54 (<1%) migrants. Of the 26 migrants diagnosed with malaria for whom pretravel information was known, 88.5% did not receive pretravel health information. Before November 16, 2018, patients' reasons for travel, exposure country, and exposure region were not linked to an individual diagnosis. Thus, results of these data from January 1, 2012, to November 15, 2018 (early period), and from November 16, 2018, to December 31, 2021 (later period), are reported separately. During the early and later periods, the most frequent regions of exposure were Sub-Saharan Africa (22.7% and 26.2%, respectively), the Caribbean (21.3% and 8.4%, respectively), Central America (13.4% and 27.6%, respectively), and South East Asia (13.1% and 16.9%, respectively). Migrants with diagnosed malaria were most frequently exposed in Sub-Saharan Africa (89.3% and 100%, respectively).Among nonmigrant travelers returning to the United States, the median age was 37 years (range = <19 years to 96 years); 55.7% were female, 75.3% were born in the United States, and 89.4% were U.S. citizens. A majority (90.6%) were seen as outpatients, and of 8,967 nonmigrant travelers with available information, 5,878 (65.6%) did not receive pretravel health information. Of 11,987 diagnoses, the most frequent were related to the gastrointestinal system (5,173; 43.2%). The most frequent diagnoses among nonmigrant travelers were acute diarrhea (16.9%), viral syndrome (4.9%), and irritable bowel syndrome (4.1%).Malaria was diagnosed in 421 (3.5%) nonmigrant travelers. During the early (January 1, 2012, to November 15, 2018) and later (November 16, 2018, to December 31, 2021) periods, the most frequent reasons for travel among nonmigrant travelers were tourism (44.8% and 53.6%, respectively), travelers visiting friends and relatives (VFRs) (22.0% and 21.4%, respectively), business (13.4% and 12.3%, respectively), and missionary or humanitarian aid (13.1% and 6.2%, respectively). The most frequent regions of exposure for any diagnosis among nonmigrant travelers during the early and later period were Central America (19.2% and 17.3%, respectively), Sub-Saharan Africa (17.7% and 25.5%, respectively), the Caribbean (13.0% and 10.9%, respectively), and South East Asia (10.4% and 11.2%, respectively).Nonmigrant travelers who had malaria diagnosed were most frequently exposed in Sub-Saharan Africa (88.6% and 95.9% during the early and later period, respectively) and VFRs (70.3% and 57.9%, respectively). Among VFRs with malaria, a majority did not receive pretravel health information (70.2% and 83.3%, respectively) or take malaria chemoprophylaxis (88.3% and 100%, respectively).
    Interpretation: Among ill U.S. travelers evaluated at U.S. GeoSentinel sites after travel, the majority were nonmigrant travelers who most frequently received a gastrointestinal disease diagnosis, implying that persons from the United States traveling internationally might be exposed to contaminated food and water. Migrants most frequently received diagnoses of conditions such as vitamin D deficiency and latent tuberculosis, which might result from adverse circumstances before and during migration (e.g., malnutrition and food insecurity, limited access to adequate sanitation and hygiene, and crowded housing,). Malaria was diagnosed in both migrants and nonmigrant travelers, and only a limited number reported taking malaria chemoprophylaxis, which might be attributed to both barriers to acquiring pretravel health care (especially for VFRs) and lack of prevention practices (e.g., insect repellant use) during travel. The number of ill travelers evaluated by U.S. GeoSentinel sites after travel decreased in 2020 and 2021 compared with previous years because of the COVID-19 pandemic and associated travel restrictions. GeoSentinel detected limited cases of COVID-19 and did not detect any sentinel cases early in the pandemic because of the lack of global diagnostic testing capacity.
    Public health action: The findings in this report describe the scope of health-related conditions that migrants and returning nonmigrant travelers to the United States acquired, illustrating risk for acquiring illnesses during travel. In addition, certain travelers do not seek pretravel health care, even when traveling to areas in which high-risk, preventable diseases are endemic. Health care professionals can aid international travelers by providing evaluations and destination-specific advice.Health care professionals should both foster trust and enhance pretravel prevention messaging for VFRs, a group known to have a higher incidence of serious diseases after travel (e.g., malaria and enteric fever). Health care professionals should continue to advocate for medical care in underserved populations (e.g., VFRs and migrants) to prevent disease progression, reactivation, and potential spread to and within vulnerable populations. Because both travel and infectious diseases evolve, public health professionals should explore ways to enhance the detection of emerging diseases that might not be captured by current surveillance systems that are not site based.
    MeSH term(s) Adult ; Female ; Humans ; Male ; Young Adult ; Communicable Diseases/diagnosis ; Communicable Diseases/epidemiology ; COVID-19/epidemiology ; Latent Tuberculosis/epidemiology ; Malaria/diagnosis ; Malaria/epidemiology ; Malaria/drug therapy ; Pandemics ; Retrospective Studies ; Transients and Migrants ; Travel ; Travel-Related Illness ; United States/epidemiology ; Zika Virus ; Zika Virus Infection/diagnosis ; Zika Virus Infection/epidemiology ; Adolescent ; Middle Aged ; Aged ; Aged, 80 and over
    Language English
    Publishing date 2023-06-30
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 605652-0
    ISSN 1545-8636 ; 0892-3787
    ISSN (online) 1545-8636
    ISSN 0892-3787
    DOI 10.15585/mmwr.ss7207a1
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  10. Article ; Online: Benzophenone-3 and antinuclear antibodies in U.S. adolescents and adults ages 12-39 years.

    Parks, Christine G / Meier, Helen C S / Jusko, Todd A / Wilkerson, Jesse / Miller, Frederick W / Sandler, Dale P

    Frontiers in immunology

    2022  Volume 13, Page(s) 958527

    Abstract: Background: Between 1988 and 2012, prevalence of antinuclear antibodies (ANA) increased in the U.S ...

    Abstract Background: Between 1988 and 2012, prevalence of antinuclear antibodies (ANA) increased in the U.S., especially in adolescents and non-Hispanic Whites. Female predominance of ANA suggests a role for hormonal factors, including xenobiotic exposures that may disrupt endocrine signaling. Benzophenone-3 (BP-3) is one such chemical with increasing exposure through sunscreen use. We investigated whether urinary BP-3 levels were related to ANA in adolescents and young adults.
    Methods: In a sample of 1,785 individuals ages 12-39 years in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES; 2003-4, 2011-12), we examined cross-sectional associations of ANA (N=192; 3+ or 4+ at the 1:80 dilution, measured by HEp-2 immunofluorescence) with urinary BP-3, and other phenols bisphenol-A, triclosan, and parabens. Adjusted prevalence odds ratios (POR) were calculated in season-stratified models [winter (November-April) and summer (May-October)], given differences in sunscreen use and BP-3 concentrations.
    Results: BP-3 concentrations (detected in >98.5% of individuals) did not differ by ANA positivity in the summer (geometric mean, GM 30.6 ng/ml ANA-positive vs. 35.3 ANA-negative; GM ratio 1.15), but in winter were higher among ANA-positives (50.2 vs. 20.1 ANA-negative; GM ratio 2.50). ANA was associated with log
    Conclusions: The association of urinary BP-3 with ANA in the winter may reflect different exposure patterns or unmeasured confounders. Findings warrant replication in prospective studies and including past and year-round exposures.
    MeSH term(s) Adolescent ; Adult ; Antibodies, Antinuclear ; Benzhydryl Compounds ; Benzophenones ; Child ; Cross-Sectional Studies ; Female ; Humans ; Leukocyte Disorders ; Male ; Nutrition Surveys ; Parabens ; Phenols ; Prospective Studies ; Sunscreening Agents ; Triclosan/urine ; Xenobiotics ; Young Adult
    Chemical Substances Antibodies, Antinuclear ; Benzhydryl Compounds ; Benzophenones ; Parabens ; Phenols ; Sunscreening Agents ; Xenobiotics ; Triclosan (4NM5039Y5X) ; oxybenzone (95OOS7VE0Y) ; bisphenol A (MLT3645I99)
    Language English
    Publishing date 2022-09-13
    Publishing country Switzerland
    Document type Journal Article ; Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't ; Research Support, N.I.H., Intramural
    ZDB-ID 2606827-8
    ISSN 1664-3224 ; 1664-3224
    ISSN (online) 1664-3224
    ISSN 1664-3224
    DOI 10.3389/fimmu.2022.958527
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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