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Glen A. Satten

Researcher at Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Publications -  156
Citations -  18331

Glen A. Satten is an academic researcher from Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Estimator. The author has an hindex of 50, co-authored 143 publications receiving 17581 citations. Previous affiliations of Glen A. Satten include Government of the United States of America & University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

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New Testing Strategy to Detect Early HIV-1 Infection for Use in Incidence Estimates and for Clinical and Prevention Purposes

TL;DR: The sensitive/less sensitive testing strategy provides accurate diagnosis of early HIV-1 infection, provides accurate estimates of HIV- 1 incidence, can facilitate clinical studies of earlyAIDS, and provides information on HIV-2 infection duration for care planning.
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Molecular Epidemiology of HIV Transmission in a Dental Practice

TL;DR: Comparative genetic analyses showed that the viruses from the dentist and five dental patients were closely related, and indicated that these patients became infected with HIV while receiving care from a dentist with AIDS.
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Time course of detection of viral and serologic markers preceding human immunodeficiency virus type 1 seroconversion: implications for screening of blood and tissue donors

TL;DR: Recent improvement in the sensitivity of anti‐HIV assays has resulted in significant shortening of the preseroconversion window period, and the incremental reduction in the window period that could be achieved by implementing direct virus‐detection Assays has diminished significantly.
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Age-associated DNA methylation in pediatric populations

TL;DR: Examining the methylation of 27,578 CpG dinucleotides in peripheral blood DNA from a cross-sectional study of 398 boys, aged 3-17 yr, and finding significant age-associated changes in DNAm at 2078 loci concludes that age-related DNAm changes in peripheralBlood occur more rapidly during childhood and are imperfectly accounted for by statistical corrections that are linear in age.