戻る
「早戻しボタン」を押すと検索画面に戻ります。 [閉じる]

コーパス検索結果 (1語後でソート)

通し番号をクリックするとPubMedの該当ページを表示します
1 rital status, diet, alcohol consumption, and occupational exposures).
2 from a canal persisted after controlling for occupational exposure.
3 ospective, questionnaire-based assessment of occupational exposure.
4  days was recommended for HCP with high-risk occupational exposure.
5 ased risk for avian influenza infection from occupational exposure.
6 sk, but most of that population faces little occupational exposure.
7 subjects with wheat-specific IgE but without occupational exposure.
8 ls may be especially susceptible to inhalant occupational exposures.
9  characterizing risks from environmental and occupational exposures.
10 health as others with potential and relevant occupational exposures.
11 pulmonary disease (COPD) in association with occupational exposures.
12 risk estimates were adjusted for smoking and occupational exposures.
13 concerned about the potential health risk of occupational exposures.
14 ic transmission to humans often results from occupational exposures.
15 mprehensive consideration of the toxicity of occupational exposures.
16 reported for human environmental, medical or occupational exposures.
17     A job-exposure matrix was used to assess occupational exposures.
18 c analyses of a variety of environmental and occupational exposures.
19 to be problem alcohol drinkers and to report occupational exposures.
20 reported for human environmental, medical or occupational exposures.
21 solvents, coal or stone dust, or eight other occupational exposures.
22  odds of wheeze associated with nonpesticide occupational exposures.
23 aluated current employees and assessed their occupational exposures.
24 on tobacco smoking, alcohol consumption, and occupational exposures.
25 tyl levels were close to the lower limit for occupational exposures.
26 e with measles, HCWs face increased risk for occupational exposures.
27 e suggestive of significant association with occupational exposures.
28 d 29 healthcare personnel were infected from occupational exposure, 1 of whom transmitted measles to
29 air and water pollution, chemicals in foods, occupational exposures, agricultural chemicals, metals,
30 t in differences between types and levels of occupational exposures among women and men and can affec
31 xis Registry, we identified cases related to occupational exposure and analyzed the elicitors, demogr
32 e tested for interaction between smoking and occupational exposure and assessed associations separate
33 .,) is of crucial importance in the field of occupational exposure and human health-related applicati
34  worker effects can be present in studies of occupational exposure and pregnancy outcomes, and many o
35 s in Minnesota to assess potential routes of occupational exposure and risk for interspecies transmis
36         We evaluated the association between occupational exposures and incidence of COPD in the Swis
37  epidemic, concern was raised about risks of occupational exposures and infections among health care
38 as to determine the association between male occupational exposures and infertility.
39 idual, and specific external factors include occupational exposures and lifestyle factors.
40 r, clinically important associations between occupational exposures and male infertility could be ide
41 , the current evidence on the association of occupational exposures and menstrual disorders is scarce
42 f expected imaging patterns related to known occupational exposures and must also recognize newly des
43 examine healthy worker effects in studies of occupational exposures and pregnancy outcomes: the healt
44          We examined the association between occupational exposures and risk of a first clinical diag
45     Although the association between certain occupational exposures and the development of autoimmune
46 ified genes are true susceptibility loci for occupational exposures and whether these SNP-by-exposure
47 in carpet dust, such as home and garden use, occupational exposure, and nearby agricultural applicati
48 e effects has not yet been investigated when occupational exposure, and not employment status, is the
49 ital status, body mass, alcohol consumption, occupational exposures, and diet were used to describe t
50   Further evaluation of the role of viruses, occupational exposures, and genetics in the etiology of
51   Bladder cancer is associated with smoking, occupational exposures, and glutathione S-transferase (G
52 the attacks, examine their associations with occupational exposures, and quantify physical and mental
53 ng diet, non-malignant respiratory diseases, occupational exposures, and susceptibility-gene.
54 d self-reported information on lifestyle and occupational, exposure, and health histories.
55  high (kappa's between 0.4 and 0.8) for many occupational exposures; and low (kappa's < 0.4) for illn
56  mechanisms of anaphylactic reactions due to occupational exposure are usually IgE-mediated and less
57 in Baltimore, Maryland, investigated whether occupational exposures are associated with death from tu
58 t a priori hypotheses that environmental and occupational exposures are associated with sarcoidosis.
59 ct environmental monitoring data of multiple occupational exposures are needed to assess the relative
60                                              Occupational exposures are suspected of contributing to
61   The challenge of accurately identifying an occupational exposure as the cause of lung disease deman
62 LLs after 2016 and similar environmental and occupational exposures as before, lead-contaminated opiu
63                                           An occupational exposure assessment indicated that more tha
64  that ratify IMS as a serious alternative in occupational exposure assessment.
65                                              Occupational exposure-associated risk of stage II+ COPD
66 nd among those with established disease, the occupational exposure associations with 6-minute-walk di
67 een two- and fivefold, were observed for all occupational exposures at high levels.
68 phic characteristics, risk factors (smoking, occupational exposure, atopic diseases), symptoms (chron
69 ear, or >20 mSv/year (upper annual limit for occupational exposure averaged over 5 years).
70  PFOA in serum (250-1050 ng/mL), the ongoing occupational exposure (both direct and indirect) was of
71 ncreased by cigarette smoking and by certain occupational exposures, but familial factors also clearl
72        Historically, studies have focused on occupational exposures, but more recent studies have con
73                 An intermediate/high risk of occupational exposure by JEM was found in 38% of partici
74 ed tomography has demonstrated that specific occupational exposures can result in a variety of patter
75 d associations have differed in samples with occupational exposure compared with those with mainly en
76 variates including age, body mass index, and occupational exposures, consistent inverse associations
77 th large informal and unregulated workforces-occupational exposures continue to impose a heavy burden
78                                     Although occupational exposures contribute to a significant propo
79 btained from the questionnaire was linked to occupational exposures derived through an industry-speci
80 sures as well as children born to women with occupational exposure during pregnancy.
81 demic is unclear given the potential risk of occupational exposure during primary percutaneous corona
82  studies will examine the contribution of an occupational exposure (e.g., welding fume inhalation) in
83 c autoimmune diseases may be associated with occupational exposures encountered in farming and indust
84          We retrospectively audited hospital occupational exposure events over a 10-year period, in a
85 me and resistome of veterinary students with occupational exposure for 3 months.
86  the same order of magnitude as percutaneous occupational exposures for which the CDC recommends PEP.
87                          Characterization of occupational exposures from wildland firefighting is imp
88 em; however, studies among workers with high occupational exposures generally have shown either no or
89 02, 7.39)) compared to females with unlikely occupational exposure (GM: 2.16 mug/L, 95% CI: (1.73, 2.
90 viral treatment prevents HIV infection after occupational exposure has led to the recommendation that
91  strategy for diagnosing HCV infection after occupational exposures has not been defined.
92  and emotional stressors, climate, diet, and occupational exposures have been studied using various o
93 -control studies regarding environmental and occupational exposures have yet to identify risk factors
94 y to sunlight, and detailed occupational and occupational exposure history.
95 xposure to B. pertussis (infected as adults, occupational exposure, immunized with an acellular vacci
96 ) who contracted unusual dermatitis after an occupational exposure in July and August of 2012 while w
97             The trend has been attributed to occupational exposure in the shipbuilding industry durin
98 ned for medical, lifestyle, residential, and occupational exposures in a population-based sample of 3
99            The authors evaluated the role of occupational exposures in asthma, chronic bronchitis, an
100        This genome-wide interaction study on occupational exposures in relation to the level of lung
101               These data support the role of occupational exposures in the etiology of respiratory il
102   The authors evaluated associations between occupational exposures in the textile industry and the r
103      Multivariable models with self-reported occupational exposures in various exposure time windows
104 1.00, 1.86) after adjustment for smoking and occupational exposures including asbestos.
105                            The prevalence of occupational exposures increased linearly with the numbe
106 st, the authors investigated whether women's occupational exposures increased risks of delivering inf
107  annual health care facility visits included occupational exposures, indoor air pollution, drinking w
108                                              Occupational exposure is an important, global cause of r
109  have determined that community, rather than occupational, exposure is the more significant risk for
110 nt analyses suggest excess relative risks at occupational exposure levels.
111 cant that disrupts mitochondrial function at occupational exposure levels.
112       A job exposure matrix (JEM) determined occupational exposure likelihood based on longest job in
113          At levels well below the current US occupational exposure limit guidelines (40 microg/dL), b
114 characterize major food allergens and define occupational exposure limits, evaluate the relative cont
115 though concentrations did not exceed current occupational exposure limits, wildland firefighters are
116 1200 blood samples from people with no known occupational exposure, median blood levels for all n-alk
117 what mechanisms or environmental, dietary or occupational exposures might have created the mutations
118                        Even many years after occupational exposure, more than half the blood cells of
119                      We investigated whether occupational exposures near 1 ppm increase the incidence
120                  We previously reported that occupational exposures near the U.S. Occupational Safety
121 xposure type, with difference guidelines for occupational exposure, nonoccupational exposure, and sex
122                                     Over 200 occupational exposures occurred when the unknown isolate
123 y; (3) diagnosis and management of AGWs; (4) occupational exposure of healthcare workers; (5) anal ca
124 ficiently sensitive for the determination of occupational exposures of CrVI.
125    RATIONALE: The impact of a broad range of occupational exposures on subclinical interstitial lung
126                                  The role of occupational exposures on success of FESS has never been
127 ls cost-prohibitive for applications such as occupational exposure or environmental protection.
128 increased risk through medical, surgical, or occupational exposure or exposure to animals.
129             A vaccine to protect humans from occupational exposure or from zoonotic infection in area
130 tio [OR], 2.46; 95% CI, 1.52-4.01), years of occupational exposure (OR, 1.04 per year; 95% CI, 1.01-1
131  (2015) to calculate the potential impact of occupational exposure over the entire supply chain of pr
132 ry BPA compared to individuals with unlikely occupational exposure (p-value <0.001).
133 iables such as age, height, race, education, occupational exposure, parity, and maternal smoking.
134  fibrosing alveolitis (CFA) may be caused by occupational exposures, particularly to metal or wood du
135 cern from an environmental and, potentially, occupational exposure perspective are the concentrations
136  a major scientific gap on how to assess the occupational exposure risk of mosquito biting and arbovi
137 ures and must also recognize newly described occupational exposure risks, often related to recent cha
138 licated SNPs that interacted with one of the occupational exposures, several identified loci were pla
139 rted two fatalities (n = 1,280 cases) and an occupational exposure study of 19 forestry workers repor
140 rted two fatalities (n = 1,280 cases) and an occupational exposure study of 19 forestry workers repor
141  particularly to those at high risk of early occupational exposure, such as first responders and heal
142             To generate hypotheses regarding occupational exposures that may cause systemic autoimmun
143  that are absorbed via the diet, or via past occupational exposure; therefore their health effects re
144 lating evidence derives from studies linking occupational exposure to AChEis to chronic health sympto
145 e abattoirs in Minnesota and Indiana who had occupational exposure to aerosolised porcine brain.
146                                              Occupational exposure to aerosolized particles of oil-ba
147     Challenges of distinguishing the role of occupational exposure to allergens, also present in non-
148 caused by environmental exposures, including occupational exposure to alpha radiation emitted by plut
149 ingococcal disease in a laboratorian who had occupational exposure to an N. meningitidis isolate of t
150 n, raising questions about the potential for occupational exposure to an opportunistic and drug-resis
151 1.4]), and increased risk was also seen with occupational exposure to animals and pesticides.
152                             Environmental or occupational exposure to arsenic is associated with a gr
153                            Environmental and occupational exposure to arsenite is associated with an
154 4 bladder tumors from people with high-level occupational exposure to arylamines to those in 30 bladd
155                                   Individual occupational exposure to asbestos was derived from the l
156                                              Occupational exposure to asbestos was determined by a pr
157   Complete job histories were collected, and occupational exposure to asbestos, mineral wool (MW), an
158 l = 0.895-0.982), adjusted for age, sex, and occupational exposure to asbestos.
159 insidious tumor associated historically with occupational exposure to asbestos.
160 as done for all of the patients who reported occupational exposure to asbestos.
161                                              Occupational exposure to asphalt fumes may pose a health
162 for support toxicity studies using simulated occupational exposure to asphalt fumes.
163               Data on leukemia mortality and occupational exposure to benzene among rubber hydrochlor
164  histories, provide additional evidence that occupational exposure to benzene is associated with NHL
165 l malignancy among workers with a history of occupational exposure to benzene is warranted.
166 rmatogonia, our findings raise concerns that occupational exposure to benzene may have persistent rep
167       Chronic beryllium disease is caused by occupational exposure to beryllium containing particles,
168 dy to identify novel susceptibility loci for occupational exposure to biological dust, mineral dust,
169 ns from infected donors, injecting drug use, occupational exposure to blood (primarily contaminated n
170 a compelling argument for protection against occupational exposure to blood either by percutaneous sh
171 l guidelines for management of patients with occupational exposure to body fluids improved documentat
172                                              Occupational exposure to both dust and fumes was reporte
173 ermal receipt paper is a potential source of occupational exposure to BPA, BPS, and BPSIP.
174  a group of shepherds and veterinarians with occupational exposure to C abortus-infected sheep reveal
175 les from shepherds and abattoir workers with occupational exposure to camels.
176 er describes a novel approach to account for occupational exposure to chemicals by inhalation in LCA.
177            This paper makes the inclusion of occupational exposure to chemicals fully compatible with
178 t in this paper assesses health impacts from occupational exposure to chemicals with population expos
179    Increased risk of NHL was associated with occupational exposure to chlorinated solvents (odds rati
180                           HCP with high-risk occupational exposure to COVID-19 had increased probabil
181                        HCP with a history of occupational exposure to COVID-19 were notified to the H
182                                              Occupational exposure to Cr(VI) is strongly associated w
183 ung cancer and subtype risks associated with occupational exposure to diesel exhaust characterized by
184                                              Occupational exposure to dust and fumes in men and women
185                                     Although occupational exposure to dust and fumes is considered a
186 uirements, and semiquantitative estimates of occupational exposure to dust, fumes, smoke, and gas.
187                 For determination of whether occupational exposure to EGE was associated with increas
188 ine whether there was an association between occupational exposure to electromagnetic fields (EMFs) o
189                           The ideal study of occupational exposure to electromagnetic fields and canc
190 , Li et al. present a well-designed study on occupational exposure to ELF fields and breast cancer th
191 support possible independent associations of occupational exposure to ELF-MF and electric shocks with
192 il have been demonstrated to be sensitive to occupational exposure to enriched and depleted U, a resu
193 n urine samples from 30 adults with no known occupational exposure to environmental phenols.
194  risk of stillbirth with increasing paternal occupational exposure to external radiation are qualitat
195              We explored the associations of occupational exposure to extremely low-frequency magneti
196                                              Occupational exposure to foods is responsible for up to
197                     Our results suggest that occupational exposure to fuel oil ash is associated with
198                                              Occupational exposure to gas, dust, and fumes (GDF) incr
199     A veterinarian became infected following occupational exposure to H7N2 virus-infected cats, neces
200                                     Although occupational exposure to HBV after vaccination did not i
201 ls were detected in health care workers with occupational exposure to HBV and in patients who acquire
202 ne in 90 health care workers with or without occupational exposure to HBV, 10-28 years after vaccinat
203 cells in vaccinated health care workers with occupational exposure to HBV.
204  in 2 HCV-seronegative persons with possible occupational exposure to HCV were found.
205                                         When occupational exposure to HIV is suspected, the applicati
206  prevalence among adults with versus without occupational exposure to IHOs and among children living
207 immunocompromised individuals and those with occupational exposure to infected animals.
208                              One person with occupational exposure to infected cats became infected w
209 night sweats, contact with sick individuals, occupational exposure to infection, bleeding, immunodefi
210 musty odors (OR 1.62, CI 1.24-2.11) and with occupational exposure to insecticides (OR 1.61, CI 1.13-
211 t glioma and meningioma risk associated with occupational exposure to insecticides and herbicides in
212 pt 11, 2001 (9/11) created the potential for occupational exposure to known and suspected carcinogens
213 ndings do not support an association between occupational exposure to loud noise and acoustic neuroma
214                 In electric utility workers, occupational exposure to magnetic fields has previously
215       Pneumonia was associated with reported occupational exposure to metal fume in the previous year
216 cated by wax printing was designed to assess occupational exposure to metal-containing aerosols.
217 ucted to investigate the association between occupational exposure to MFs and the risk of breast canc
218 ed is autoimmune in origin and is related to occupational exposure to multiple aerosolised porcine br
219  results of this study provide evidence that occupational exposure to NHPs may increase the risk of i
220                     Forty-five subjects with occupational exposure to Ni and 75 referents were recrui
221      The results of this study indicate that occupational exposure to Ni is associated with alteratio
222 in a Chinese population to determine whether occupational exposure to Ni is associated with alteratio
223                                              Occupational exposure to nickel (Ni) is associated with
224 uals of the general population with no known occupational exposure to NMP and NEP.
225                             Demonstrate that occupational exposure to nonhypoxic hypobaria is associa
226                      The association between occupational exposure to organic solvents and SLE was no
227 est an increased risk of NHL associated with occupational exposure to organic solvents for women.
228 e primary objective was to determine whether occupational exposure to organic solvents is related to
229 ng other risk factors for WMHs and adds this occupational exposure to other environmentally related p
230 Our findings indicate an association between occupational exposure to PAHs among mothers who are >/=
231 g the association between estimated maternal occupational exposure to PAHs and gastroschisis in offsp
232 workers with respiratory symptoms related to occupational exposure to peach trees.
233 nvestigated the association between parental occupational exposure to pesticides and risk of childhoo
234 ooled semen sample from people with no known occupational exposure to phthalates.
235 fying exposure in the general population and occupational exposure to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon
236                             Both private and occupational exposure to PPD is frequent, but the effect
237 ere stratified on the basis of self-reported occupational exposure to procedures that involve radiati
238               Neither the several studies of occupational exposure to radiofrequencies nor the few of
239 ng cancer in former uranium miners with high occupational exposure to radon gas.
240 of scenarios for reducing lung cancer due to occupational exposure to respirable crystalline silica.
241                          This study assessed occupational exposure to rotavirus and Shigella spp. dur
242  car washers who have heavy and quantifiable occupational exposure to Schistosoma mansoni cercariae r
243                                              Occupational exposure to silica has been observed to cau
244                                              Occupational exposure to small molecules, such as metals
245 1.1, 3.9), and more than 6 years' cumulative occupational exposure to soil (odds ratio = 2.7, 95% con
246         We examined the relationship between occupational exposure to solvents and breast cancer in a
247                                              Occupational exposure to solvents before first birth, a
248                                              Occupational exposure to solvents, including n-hexane, h
249      We enrolled adults who had household or occupational exposure to someone with confirmed Covid-19
250                                              Occupational exposure to specific metals, especially man
251 s: swine farmers (n=264) and persons without occupational exposure to swine (n=255) in Moldova, a cou
252 evalence of HEV infection among persons with occupational exposure to swine suggests animal-to-human
253 ally designed to assess risk associated with occupational exposure to TCE through analysis of detaile
254 n in humans who have experienced a high-risk occupational exposure to the Ebola virus, such as a need
255                                              Occupational exposure to the mitochondrial complex I inh
256 demonstrates that individuals with potential occupational exposure to thermal paper receipts are more
257 major finding is that females with potential occupational exposure to thermal paper receipts have sig
258 n on type of health care work or duration of occupational exposure to tuberculosis.
259      Cross-sectional studies have shown that occupational exposure to vapors, gases, dusts, and fumes
260 he current study, we aimed to assess whether occupational exposure to VGDF and pesticides is associat
261                                              Occupational exposure to vinyl chloride (VC) is a well-d
262 , the authors evaluated the relation between occupational exposure to WBV and Parkinson's disease.
263                          In this population, occupational exposure to welding fumes accounted for app
264 l for low, medium, and high probabilities of occupational exposures to asbestos were 1.71 (1.32-2.21)
265 arch has been conducted on health effects of occupational exposures to asbestos, many issues related
266                          The contribution of occupational exposures to asthma in health care professi
267                                              Occupational exposures to benzene were associated with i
268         In a Swiss working adult population, occupational exposures to biological dusts, mineral dust
269                   Currently, 380 000-400 000 occupational exposures to blood-borne pathogens occur an
270     Medical students may be at high risk for occupational exposures to blood.
271                                              Occupational exposures to combustion emissions were exam
272          Potential reproductive effects from occupational exposures to ethylene glycol ethers (EGE) a
273  considered to be the standard of care after occupational exposures to fluids or tissues infected wit
274 0 were from patients who were the sources of occupational exposures to HIV-1; 16 of the specimens in
275 rmative Aging Study who were without unusual occupational exposures to lead and who were healthy when
276                                              Occupational exposures to metal or wood dust are indepen
277                The role of environmental and occupational exposures to neurotoxicants in the pathogen
278 e presents an innovative approach to include occupational exposures to organic chemicals in life cycl
279 ssociation with infertility was observed for occupational exposures to radiation (odds ratio=0.21, 95
280 an be used as a tool for examining potential occupational exposures to SVOCs among nail salon workers
281                         To determine whether occupational exposures to vapors, gas, dust, and fumes (
282 tember 2014 to April 2015, 6 persons who had occupational exposures to Zaire ebolavirus in West Afric
283 A CC398 introduction and transmission: human occupational exposure, trade of pigs and livestock trans
284       The increased risk may be explained by occupational exposure, underlining the urgent need for t
285                      Accounting for smoking, occupational exposure was associated with COPD risk and,
286                                              Occupational exposure was based on historical measuremen
287                                     Relevant occupational exposure was reported by 25% of all respond
288 st outcome measures, but no interaction with occupational exposure was seen.
289               Information on occupations and occupational exposures was collected at enrollment for 5
290 irmed that the odds ratio (OR) for reporting occupational exposures was significantly higher in those
291                                              Occupational exposures were assessed by self-reported VG
292 ic regression were used to determine whether occupational exposures were associated with log-transfor
293        There was no consistent evidence that occupational exposures were associated with progression
294 iber-years per milliliter of air, and annual occupational exposures were estimated on the basis of de
295                                              Occupational exposures were investigated in a multicente
296 f lung function impairment and COPD, such as occupational exposures, which are thought to contribute
297 tionally, we estimated risks associated with occupational exposures, which were assigned using job-ex
298 gression models estimated the association of occupational exposure with COPD, and among those with es
299           The authors compared self-reported occupational exposures with a workplace-specific job exp
300 r emissions, making it possible to integrate occupational exposure within LCIA.

 
Page Top