A
Anne Marie Bollen
Researcher at University of Washington
Publications - 77
Citations - 3293
Anne Marie Bollen is an academic researcher from University of Washington. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Low birth weight. The author has an hindex of 26, co-authored 76 publications receiving 3043 citations. Previous affiliations of Anne Marie Bollen include National Taiwan University & University of Michigan.
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A specific immunoassay for monitoring human bone resorption: quantitation of type I collagen cross-linked N-telopeptides in urine
Dennis A. Hanson,Mary Ann E. Weis,Anne Marie Bollen,Shoshana L. Maslan,Frederick R. Singer,David R. Eyre +5 more
TL;DR: The method shows considerable promise as a rapid and specific index of human bone resorption rates, with greatly improved specificity and convenience over total pyridinoline analysis, against samples from normal subjects and from patients with metabolic bone disease.
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The effects of orthodontic therapy on periodontal health: a systematic review of controlled evidence.
TL;DR: An absence of reliable evidence describing positive effects of orthodontic treatment on periodontal health was identified, and the existing evidence suggests that orthmodontic therapy results in small detrimental effects to the periodontium.
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Use of dental panoramic radiographs in identifying younger postmenopausal women with osteoporosis
Akira Taguchi,Mikio Tsuda,Masahiko Ohtsuka,Ichiro Kodama,Mitsuhiro Sanada,Takashi Nakamoto,Koji Inagaki,Toshihide Noguchi,Yoshiki Kudo,Yoshikazu Suei,Keiji Tanimoto,Anne Marie Bollen +11 more
TL;DR: Dentists may be able to refer postmenopausal women younger than 65 years for bone densitometry on the basis of incidental findings on dental panoramic radiographs.
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Case-control study on self-reported osteoporotic fractures and mandibular cortical bone.
TL;DR: Subjects with a self-reported history of osteoporotic fractures tend to have increased resorption and thinning of the mandibular lower cortex.
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Detecting osteoporosis using dental radiographs: a comparison of four methods
TL;DR: Pixel intensity was significantly more effective than the other dental methods at distinguishing between radiographs from the osteoporotic group and the control group, although fractal dimension and microdensitometry methods also were effective.