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Cynthia A. Moore

Researcher at Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Publications -  149
Citations -  13543

Cynthia A. Moore is an academic researcher from Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Pregnancy. The author has an hindex of 48, co-authored 136 publications receiving 12425 citations. Previous affiliations of Cynthia A. Moore include Association of Public Health Laboratories & Baylor College of Medicine.

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Prevention of Neural-Tube Defects with Folic Acid in China

TL;DR: Evaluated the outcomes of pregnancy in women who were asked to take a pill containing 400 μg of folic acid alone daily from the time of their premarital examination until the end of their first trimester of pregnancy, and identified 102 and 173 women with neural-tube defects.
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Neural-Tube Defects

TL;DR: The results of randomized trials indicate that at least half the cases of neural-tube defects could be prevented if women consumed sufficient amounts of the B vitamin folic acid before conception and during early pregnancy.
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The National Birth Defects Prevention Study.

TL;DR: The compiled interview data and banked DNA of approximately 35 categories of birth defects will facilitate future research as new hypotheses and improved technologies emerge and enable scientists to study the epidemiology of some rare birth defects for the first time.
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Characterizing the Pattern of Anomalies in Congenital Zika Syndrome for Pediatric Clinicians.

TL;DR: It is concluded that congenital Zika syndrome is a recognizable pattern of structural anomalies and functional disabilities secondary to central and, perhaps, peripheral nervous system damage that can help determine essential follow-up and ongoing care for affected infants and children.
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The continuum of translation research in genomic medicine: how can we accelerate the appropriate integration of human genome discoveries into health care and disease prevention?

TL;DR: A framework for the continuum of multidisciplinary translation research that builds on previous characterization efforts in genomics and other areas in health care and prevention is presented and the types of translation research can overlap and provide feedback loops to allow integration of new knowledge.