L
Len Levy
Researcher at University of Leicester
Publications - 10
Citations - 1297
Len Levy is an academic researcher from University of Leicester. The author has contributed to research in topics: Environmental exposure & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 7 publications receiving 1255 citations.
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IARC Monographs on the evaluation of carcinogenic risks to humans: Some traditional herbal medicines, some mycotoxins, naphthalene and styrene
Ahti Anttila,Ramesh V. Bhat,James A. Bond,Susan J. Borghoff,F. Xavier Bosch,Gary P. Carlson,Marcel Castegnaro,George Cruzan,Wentzel C. A. Gelderblom,Ulla Hass,Sara H. Henry,Ronald A. Herbert,Marc Jackson,Tingliang Jiang,A. Douglas Kinghorn,Siegfried Knasmüller,Len Levy,Douglas McGregor,J. David Miller,Hideki Mori,Steve Olin,Douglas L. Park,John I. Pitt,Ronald T. Riley,Heinz H. Schmeiser,Jack Siemiatycki,Jean-Louis Vanherweghem,Christopher P. Wild,Takumi Yoshizawa,Alan R. Buckpitt,Paul M. Coates,Gary L. Foureman,Trevor Green,C. William Jameson,David G. Longfellow,Robert Baan,Michael G. Bird,John Cheney,Silvia Franceschi,Marlin Friesen,Yann Grosse,Ted Junghans,Nikolai Napalkov,Christiane Partensky,Jerry Rice,Vikash Sewram,Leslie T. Stayner,Kurt Straif,Eero Suonio,Sandrine Egraz,Brigitte Kajo,Martine Lézère,Jane Mitchell,Elspeth Perez +53 more
TL;DR: Members Ahti Anttila, Finnish Cancer Registry, Institute for Statistical and Epidemiological Cancer Research, Liisankatu 21 B, 00170 Helsinki, Finland Ramesh V. Bhat, National Institute of Nutrition, Indian Council of Medical Research, Jamai-Osmania PO, Hyderabad-500 007 AP, India.
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Recent Developments in Low-Level Lead Exposure and Intellectual Impairment in Children
TL;DR: It is concluded that the findings are important scientifically, and efforts should continue to reduce childhood exposure to lead within the many other risk factors impacting on normal childhood development, in particular the influence of the learning environment itself.
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The use of S-phenylmercapturic acid as a biomarker in molecular epidemiology studies of benzene.
Peter B. Farmer,Balvinder Kaur,Jonathan Roach,Len Levy,Dario Consonni,P.A. Bertazzi,Angela Cecilia Pesatori,Silvia Fustinoni,Marina Buratti,Matteo Bonzini,Antonio Colombi,Todor A. Popov,Domenico Maria Cavallo,Arianna Desideri,Federico Valerio,Mauro Pala,Claudia Bolognesi,Franco Merlo +17 more
TL;DR: Urinary benzene was the most discriminatory biomarker and showed a relationship with airborne benzene at all levels of exposure studied, whereas t,t-MA and S-PMA, as determined by immunoassay, were suitable only in the highest exposed workers.
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Chemical hazards in the workplace: an overview
TL;DR: The paper by Gidlow presents a most helpful overview of some of the more important features of lead toxicity and the ways in which exposure needs to be controlled and gives an important overview of a problem that many people think is solved and relates to emergency treatment for suspected cases of cyanide poisoning.
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Inhalation Toxicity of Copper Compounds: Results of 14-day range finding study for copper sulphate pentahydrate and dicopper oxide and 28-day subacute inhalation exposure of dicopper oxide in rats.
TL;DR: In this paper , the toxicological response to repeated inhalation of two copper compounds, representative of copper substances in large-scale production/use, was investigated in a range finding study at normalised copper doses.