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Chris Gennings

Researcher at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

Publications -  236
Citations -  9017

Chris Gennings is an academic researcher from Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Internal medicine. The author has an hindex of 46, co-authored 202 publications receiving 7225 citations. Previous affiliations of Chris Gennings include Mount Sinai Hospital & Virginia Commonwealth University.

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Risk assessment in immunotoxicology. I. Sensitivity and predictability of immune tests.

TL;DR: It is indicated that the performance of only two or three immune tests are sufficient to predict immunotoxic compounds in rodents (greater than 90% concordance) and the tests that showed the highest association with immunotoxicity were the splenic antibody plaque forming cell response and cell surface marker analysis.
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Characterization of Weighted Quantile Sum Regression for Highly Correlated Data in a Risk Analysis Setting.

TL;DR: A weighted quantile sum (WQS) approach to estimating a body burden index, which identifies “bad actors” in a set of highly correlated environmental chemicals, and demonstrates the improvement in accuracy this method provides over traditional ordinary regression and shrinkage methods.
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Autoregulation of cerebral blood flow in fetuses with congenital heart disease: the brain sparing effect

TL;DR: It is hypothesized that cerebral autoregulation occurs in CHD fetuses, and the degree of autoreGulation is dependent on the specific CHD and correlates with intrauterine head circumferences.
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Impact of HbA1c Measurement on Hospital Readmission Rates: Analysis of 70,000 Clinical Database Patient Records

TL;DR: The statistical model suggests that the relationship between the probability of readmission and the HbA1c measurement depends on the primary diagnosis, and that the greater attention to diabetes reflected in Hb a1c determination may improve patient outcomes and lower cost of inpatient care.
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What Can Epidemiological Studies Tell Us about the Impact of Chemical Mixtures on Human Health

TL;DR: This article proposes three broad questions that epidemiological studies can address: a) What are the potential health impacts of individual chemical agents? b) What is the interaction among agents? and c) what are the health effects of cumulative exposure to multiple agents