2003
Occupational exposure to methyl tertiary butyl ether in relation to key health symptom prevalence: the effect of measurement error correction
Keshaviah A, Weller E, Spiegelman D. Occupational exposure to methyl tertiary butyl ether in relation to key health symptom prevalence: the effect of measurement error correction. Environmetrics 2003, 14: 573-582. DOI: 10.1002/env.604.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchEffect of MTBEHealth symptomsStudy participantsJob categoriesSmoking statusSerum concentrationsBlood concentrationsHealth outcomesMTBE exposureEye irritationSignificant associationSymptomsMethyl tertiary butyl etherAvailable dataPrevalenceExposureExposure effectsParticipantsLow levelsHeadacheRegression calibration methodIrritation
1994
The effect of dietary fat and fiber on serum estrogen concentrations in premenopausal women under controlled dietary conditions
Goldin B, Woods M, Spiegelman D, Longcope C, Morrill‐LaBrode A, Dwyer J, Gualtieri L, Hertzmark E, Gorbach S. The effect of dietary fat and fiber on serum estrogen concentrations in premenopausal women under controlled dietary conditions. Cancer 1994, 74: 1125-1131. PMID: 8039147, DOI: 10.1002/1097-0142(19940801)74:3+<1125::aid-cncr2820741521>3.0.co;2-5.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsPremenopausal womenSerum concentrationsSex hormonesDietary fatEstrone sulfateSerum sex hormonesSerum estrogen concentrationsSignificant decreaseInitial control periodDietary fiberMetabolic kitchenFollicular phaseMenstrual cycleFree estradiolAmount of fatEstrogen concentrationsHigh fiberDietary conditionsControl periodEstradiolIndependent effectsWomenAndrostenedioneFatHormone