J
Joachim Heinrich
Researcher at Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich
Publications - 1327
Citations - 88485
Joachim Heinrich is an academic researcher from Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Asthma. The author has an hindex of 136, co-authored 1309 publications receiving 76887 citations. Previous affiliations of Joachim Heinrich include Politehnica University of Bucharest & Universidade Nova de Lisboa.
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Journal ArticleDOI
GIS-based estimation of exposure to particulate matter and NO2 in an urban area: stochastic versus dispersion modeling.
Josef Cyrys,Matthias Hochadel,Ulrike Gehring,Gerard Hoek,Volker Diegmann,Bert Brunekreef,Joachim Heinrich +6 more
TL;DR: Despite different assumptions and procedures used for the stochastic and dispersion modeling, both models yield similar results regarding exposure estimation of the study cohort to traffic-related air pollutants.
Journal ArticleDOI
Evaluation of land use regression models for NO2 and particulate matter in 20 European study areas: the ESCAPE project.
Meng Wang,Rob Beelen,Xavier Basagaña,Thomas Becker,Giulia Cesaroni,Kees de Hoogh,Audrius Dedele,Christophe Declercq,Konstantina Dimakopoulou,Marloes Eeftens,Francesco Forastiere,C Galassi,Regina Gražulevičienė,Barbara Hoffmann,Joachim Heinrich,Minas Iakovides,Nino Künzli,Nino Künzli,Michal Korek,Sarah Lindley,Anna Mölter,Gioia Mosler,Christian Madsen,Mark J. Nieuwenhuijsen,Harish C. Phuleria,Harish C. Phuleria,Xanthi Pedeli,Ole Raaschou-Nielsen,Andrea Ranzi,Euripides G. Stephanou,Dorothee Sugiri,Morgane Stempfelet,Ming-Yi Tsai,Ming-Yi Tsai,Ming-Yi Tsai,Timo Lanki,Orsolya Udvardy,Mihály J. Varró,Kathrin Wolf,Gudrun Weinmayr,Gudrun Weinmayr,Tarja Yli-Tuomi,Gerard Hoek,Bert Brunekreef +43 more
TL;DR: The results confirm that the predictive ability of LUR models based on relatively small training sets is overestimated by the LOOCV R(2)s, Nevertheless, in most areas Lur models still explained a substantial fraction of the variation of concentrations measured at independent sites.
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Genome-wide interaction analysis of air pollution exposure and childhood asthma with functional follow-up
Anna Gref,Simon Kebede Merid,Olena Gruzieva,Stephane Ballereau,Allan B. Becker,Tom Bellander,Anna Bergström,Yohan Bossé,Matteo Bottai,Moira Chan-Yeung,Elaine Fuertes,Despo Ierodiakonou,Ruiwei Jiang,Stéphane Joly,Meaghan J. Jones,Michael S. Kobor,Michal Korek,Anita L. Kozyrskyj,Ashok Kumar,Nathanaël Lemonnier,Elaina MacIntyre,Camille Ménard,David C. Nickle,Ma'en Obeidat,Johann Pellet,Marie Standl,Annika Sääf,Cilla Söderhäll,Carla M. T. Tiesler,Maarten van den Berge,Judith M. Vonk,Hita Vora,Cheng-Jian Xu,Josep M. Antó,Charles Auffray,Michael Brauer,Jean Bousquet,Bert Brunekreef,W. James Gauderman,Joachim Heinrich,Juha Kere,Gerard H. Koppelman,Dirkje S. Postma,Christopher Carlsten,Göran Pershagen,Erik Melén +45 more
TL;DR: The results indicated that gene‐environment interactions are important for asthma development and provided supportive evidence for interaction with air pollution for ADCY2, B4GALT5, and DLG2.
Journal ArticleDOI
PM10, and children's respiratory symptoms and lung function in the PATY study.
Gerard Hoek,S Pattenden,Saskia M. Willers,T Antova,Eleonora Fabianova,Charlotte Braun-Fahrländer,Francesco Forastiere,Ulrike Gehring,Heike Luttmann-Gibson,Leticia Grize,Joachim Heinrich,Danny Houthuijs,Nicole Janssen,Boris A. Katsnelson,Anna Kosheleva,Hanns Moshammer,Manfred Neuberger,Larisa I. Privalova,Peter Rudnai,Frank E. Speizer,Hana Šlachtová,Hana Tomášková,Renata Zlotkowska,Tony Fletcher +23 more
TL;DR: Evidence is added that long-term exposure to outdoor air pollution, characterised by the concentration of PM10, is associated with increased respiratory symptoms, and PM10 was not associated with lung function across all studies combined.
Journal ArticleDOI
Surrounding greenness and birth weight: results from the GINIplus and LISAplus birth cohorts in Munich.
Iana Markevych,Elaine Fuertes,Carla M. T. Tiesler,Matthias Birk,Carl-Peter Bauer,Sibylle Koletzko,Andrea von Berg,Dietrich Berdel,Joachim Heinrich +8 more
TL;DR: Surrounding greenness at the birth address was positively associated with birth weight in two German birth cohorts in Munich and the mechanisms driving this association remain unclear and warrant further investigation.