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Estelle Lauer

Researcher at University of Lausanne

Publications -  25
Citations -  623

Estelle Lauer is an academic researcher from University of Lausanne. The author has contributed to research in topics: Physical exercise & Hippocampus. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 24 publications receiving 503 citations. Previous affiliations of Estelle Lauer include American Board of Legal Medicine & University of Geneva.

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Automated system for on-line desorption of dried blood spots applied to LC/MS/MS pharmacokinetic study of flurbiprofen and its metabolite

TL;DR: The automated system described in this article represents an efficient tool for the LC/MS/MS analysis of DBS samples in many bioanalytical applications and showed good precision, trueness, and linearity over the expected concentration range.
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Drug vaping applied to cannabis: Is “Cannavaping” a therapeutic alternative to marijuana?

TL;DR: The results showed that illegal cannavaping would be subjected to marginal development due to the poor solubility of BHO in commercial liquid refills (especially those with high glycerin content), which prevents the manufacture of liquid refill with high BHO concentrations adopted by most recreational users of cannabis.
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Comparison of cannabinoid concentrations in oral fluid and whole blood between occasional and regular cannabis smokers prior to and after smoking a cannabis joint

TL;DR: It is found that THC, and also THC-A, shows a sharp, high concentration peak just after smoking, with a rapid decrease in these levels within 3 h, with no obvious differences found between both groups concerning THC median maximum concentrations measured either in blood or in OF.
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Use of the dried blood spot sampling process coupled with fast gas chromatography and negative-ion chemical ionization tandem mass spectrometry: application to fluoxetine, norfluoxetine, reboxetine, and paroxetine analysis.

TL;DR: The validated DBS method combines an extractive—derivative single step with a fast and sensitive GC-NICI-MS-MS technique and was successfully applied to a pharmacokinetic investigation performed on a healthy volunteer after oral administration of a single 40-mg dose of fluoxetine.