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Jens Peter Bonde

Researcher at University of Copenhagen

Publications -  500
Citations -  24560

Jens Peter Bonde is an academic researcher from University of Copenhagen. The author has contributed to research in topics: Pregnancy & Population. The author has an hindex of 76, co-authored 482 publications receiving 21726 citations. Previous affiliations of Jens Peter Bonde include Aarhus University & University of Southern Denmark.

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Risk of depressive disorder following disasters and military deployment: systematic review with meta-analysis

TL;DR: Disasters and combat experience substantially increase the risk of depression, whether psychological trauma per se or bereavement is on the causal path is unresolved.
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Diurnal scrotal skin temperature and semen quality. The Danish First Pregnancy Planner Study Team

TL;DR: It is concluded that a sedentary position is a significant source of increased scrotal skin temperature, and even moderate and physiological elevation in scrotAL skin temperature is associated with a substantially reduced sperm concentration.
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Male reproductive organs are at risk from environmental hazards.

TL;DR: Time has come where male reproductive toxicity should be addressed form entirely new angles including exposures very early in life, as new data show that environmental low-level exposure to biopersistent pollutants in the diet may pose a risk to people in all parts of the world.
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Associations between serum phthalates and biomarkers of reproductive function in 589 adult men

TL;DR: Findings are compatible with a weak anti-androgenic action of DEHP metabolites, but less so for DiNP metabolites, and significant inverse associations between serum levels of the metabolites, the proxies and serum testosterone are observed.
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Work above shoulder level and degenerative alterations of the rotator cuff tendons : a magnetic resonance imaging study.

TL;DR: An exposure-response relationship was found between lifetime upper arm elevation and supraspinatus tendinopathy, which corroborates the work-relatedness of rotator cuff disorders.