Silicone Wristbands Facilitate Exposome Study

By A Mystery Man Writer

As the environmental health science field strives to better understand the complexity of personal chemical exposures, NIEHS-funded researchers at the Oregon State University (OSU) Superfund Research Program (SRP) led by Kim Anderson, Ph.D., have developed a simple wristband and extraction method that can test exposure to 1,200 chemicals.

Sinnhuber Aquatic Research Laboratory Tour, The Superfund Research Center

Wildfire impact on indoor/outdoor air quality and chemical movement, The Superfund Research Center

Decoding the exposome, the biggest influencer on health - In depth

Cory Gerlach's Instagram, Twitter & Facebook on IDCrawl

Self-organizing map (SOM) of chemical concentrations detected in

Silicone wristbands as personal passive sampling devices: Current

Environmental Factor - August 2023: Silicone wristbands track

How Do Individuals Interact with the Urban Environment? - Blog

Exposomic sensors for capturing high chemical and spatiotemporal

K - 12 Educational Materials, The Superfund Research Center

IJERPH, Free Full-Text

©2016-2024, doctommy.com, Inc. or its affiliates