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Chulathida Chomchai

Researcher at Mahidol University International College

Publications -  28
Citations -  641

Chulathida Chomchai is an academic researcher from Mahidol University International College. The author has contributed to research in topics: acetaminophen overdose & Poison control. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 27 publications receiving 528 citations. Previous affiliations of Chulathida Chomchai include Siriraj Hospital & Mahidol University.

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Cannabis, the pregnant woman and her child: weeding out the myths

TL;DR: Current evidence indicates that cannabis use both during pregnancy and lactation, may adversely affect neurodevelopment, especially during periods of critical brain growth both in the developing fetal brain and during adolescent maturation, with impacts on neuropsychiatric, behavioural and executive functioning.
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Global patterns of methamphetamine use.

TL;DR: The geographic availability of different types of methamphetamine, the characteristics of each user population, and the psychosocial impact the two have on society are described.
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Methamphetamine abuse during pregnancy and its health impact on neonates born at siriraj hospital, bangkok, thailand

TL;DR: To ascertain the impact of intrauterine methamphetamine exposure on the overall health of newborn infants at Siriraj Hospital, Bangkok, Thailand, birth records of somatic growth parameters and neonatal withdrawal symptoms of 47 infants born to methamphetamine-abusing women were compared to 49 infants whose mothers did not use methamphetamines during pregnancy.
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The Susy Safe project overview after the first four years of activity

Dario Gregori, +86 more
TL;DR: The "Susy Safe" registry, a DG SANCO co-funded project gathering data on choking in all EU Countries and beyond, was established in order to create surveillance systems for suffocation injuries able to provide a risk-analysis profile for each of the products causing the injury.
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Infantile lead poisoning from an Asian tongue powder: a case report & subsequent public health inquiry.

TL;DR: Asian tongue powders can be a source of lead poisoning and medical toxicologists, poison centers, and public health agencies can work together internationally to accomplish effective post-marketing product surveillance.