Pages that link to "Q52545487"
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The following pages link to Growth in girls exposed in utero and postnatally to polybrominated biphenyls and polychlorinated biphenyls. (Q52545487):
Displaying 33 items.
- An approach to assessment of endocrine disruption in the National Children's Study (Q24816550) (← links)
- An overview of the effects of organic compounds on women's reproductive health and birth outcomes (Q26155268) (← links)
- Growth in Inuit children exposed to polychlorinated biphenyls and lead during fetal development and childhood (Q28384005) (← links)
- Serum dioxins and polychlorinated biphenyls are associated with growth among Russian boys (Q28385427) (← links)
- Culture, Urbanism and Changing Human Biology (Q28385961) (← links)
- Polychlorinated biphenyls and links to cardiovascular disease (Q28391417) (← links)
- Infectious and Environmental Influences on the Obesity Epidemic (Q30249084) (← links)
- Association between prenatal polychlorinated biphenyl exposure and obesity development at ages 5 and 7 y: a prospective cohort study of 656 children from the Faroe Islands (Q30586323) (← links)
- Chlorinated persistent organic pollutants, obesity, and type 2 diabetes (Q33569410) (← links)
- Likelihood-based methods for estimating the association between a health outcome and left- or interval-censored longitudinal exposure data. (Q33613795) (← links)
- Prenatal and postnatal exposure to polychlorinated biphenyls and child size at 24 months of age (Q33636895) (← links)
- Lactational exposure to polychlorinated biphenyls, dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane, and dichlorodiphenyldichloroethylene and infant growth: an analysis of the Pregnancy, Infection, and Nutrition Babies Study (Q33858533) (← links)
- Association of endocrine disruptors and obesity: perspectives from epidemiological studies (Q34421318) (← links)
- Prenatal exposure to polychlorinated biphenyls and postnatal growth: a structural analysis (Q34603237) (← links)
- Epidemiologic evidence of relationships between reproductive and child health outcomes and environmental chemical contaminants (Q34777848) (← links)
- Potential contributors to the canadian pediatric obesity epidemic (Q35687383) (← links)
- Prenatal and Postnatal Exposure to Persistent Organic Pollutants and Infant Growth: A Pooled Analysis of Seven European Birth Cohorts (Q35820652) (← links)
- Exposure to Endocrine-Disrupting Chemicals during Pregnancy and Weight at 7 Years of Age: A Multi-pollutant Approach (Q36112088) (← links)
- Maternal exposure to polybrominated and polychlorinated biphenyls: infant birth weight and gestational age. (Q36137982) (← links)
- Dietary flavonol intake is associated with age of puberty in a longitudinal cohort of girls (Q37017226) (← links)
- Prenatal exposure to persistent organochlorines and childhood obesity in the US collaborative perinatal project (Q37149741) (← links)
- Pollution and human biology (Q37735851) (← links)
- Endocrine-disrupting chemicals and obesity development in humans: A review (Q37860355) (← links)
- A decay model for assessing polybrominated biphenyl exposure among women in the Michigan Long-Term PBB Study (Q41589461) (← links)
- Prenatal exposures to perfluorinated chemicals and anthropometry at 7 years of age. (Q46205644) (← links)
- Scientific Opinion on Polybrominated Biphenyls (PBBs) in Food (Q47148897) (← links)
- Validity of parentally reported versus measured weight, length and waist in 7- to 9-year-old children for use in follow-up studies (Q47185083) (← links)
- Adipose Tissue as a Site of Toxin Accumulation (Q47884731) (← links)
- Adverse effects of prenatal exposure to atrazine during a critical period of mammary gland growth (Q51444988) (← links)
- Prenatal exposure to 1,1-dichloro-2,2-bis (p-chlorophenyl)ethylene (p,p'-DDE) in relation to child growth. (Q52666697) (← links)
- Prenatal exposure to polychlorinated biphenyls and fetal growth in British girls. (Q52691577) (← links)
- In utero exposure to a brominated flame retardant and male growth and development (Q90599442) (← links)
- Environmental exposure to polybrominated biphenyl (PBB) associates with an increased rate of biological aging (Q92376873) (← links)