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Cheolmin Kim

Researcher at Seoul National University

Publications -  16
Citations -  314

Cheolmin Kim is an academic researcher from Seoul National University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Internal medicine & Antibody. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 13 publications receiving 210 citations.

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Comparison of thyroid hormone disruption potentials by bisphenols A, S, F, and Z in embryo-larval zebrafish

TL;DR: The results clearly show that these BPA analogues can disrupt thyroid function of the larval fish, and their thyroid hormone disruption potencies could be even greater than that of BPA.
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Thyroid hormone disrupting potentials of bisphenol A and its analogues - in vitro comparison study employing rat pituitary (GH3) and thyroid follicular (FRTL-5) cells

TL;DR: Thyroid disrupting effects of nine structural analogues of BPA were evaluated along with BPA, showing that the BPA substituting chemicals may influence thyroid hormone homeostasis by affecting thyroid regulation and hormone synthesis, often at lower doses compared to BPA.
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Endocrine disrupting potential of PAHs and their alkylated analogues associated with oil spills.

TL;DR: For major PAHs and their alkylated analogues, disruption of steroidogenesis appeared to be more significant than ER-mediated effects, which shows that disruption of endocrine functions by some constituents of oil spills could be underestimated if only parent compounds are considered in assessments of hazard and risk.
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In vitro and in vivo toxicities of sediment and surface water in an area near a major steel industry of Korea: endocrine disruption, reproduction, or survival effects combined with instrumental analysis.

TL;DR: Investigation of the influence of industrial and/or municipal contaminant inputs on the aquatic environment of Pohang, Korea found that station S2 near the steel industry complex and station M3 near the municipal area showed the greatest sex hormone changes, and these changes were generally explained by the fractions which contained APs and BPA.