2016
Dietary micronutrient intake and its relationship with arsenic metabolism in Mexican women
López-Carrillo L, Gamboa-Loira B, Becerra W, Hernández-Alcaraz C, Hernández-Ramírez RU, Gandolfi AJ, Franco-Marina F, Cebrián ME. Dietary micronutrient intake and its relationship with arsenic metabolism in Mexican women. Environmental Research 2016, 151: 445-450. PMID: 27565879, PMCID: PMC5457700, DOI: 10.1016/j.envres.2016.08.015.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsMetabolism of iAsDietary micronutrient intakeFood frequency questionnaireMagnitude of exposureFrequency questionnaireDietary interventionDiet contributesDietary factorsDietary intakeMicronutrient intakeUrinary metabolitesVitamin B12Mexican womenInterindividual variationIntakeFurther studiesHigh-performance liquid chromatographyConsequent riskWomenPerformance liquid chromatographyMetabolismIAArsenic metabolismInorganic arsenicExposure
2012
Imaging Changes in Synaptic Acetylcholine Availability in Living Human Subjects
Esterlis I, Hannestad JO, Bois F, Sewell RA, Tyndale RF, Seibyl JP, Picciotto MR, Laruelle M, Carson RE, Cosgrove KP. Imaging Changes in Synaptic Acetylcholine Availability in Living Human Subjects. Journal Of Nuclear Medicine 2012, 54: 78-82. PMID: 23160789, PMCID: PMC3703589, DOI: 10.2967/jnumed.112.111922.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsNicotinic acetylcholine receptor availabilityEndogenous neurotransmitter acetylcholineNicotinic acetylcholine receptorsPhysostigmine administrationAcetylcholine availabilityExtracellular acetylcholineBaseline scanHealthy subjectsReceptor availabilityExtracellular levelsAcetylcholine receptorsMolecular neuroimagingSPECT studiesAcetylcholineNonhuman primatesTissue concentrationsNeurotransmitter acetylcholineHuman subjectsSignificant reductionAdditional scansScansParent concentrationsSubjectsVivo estimationIA
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