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Li-Li Wen

Publications -  6
Citations -  281

Li-Li Wen is an academic researcher. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Perfluorooctane. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 6 publications receiving 233 citations.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Association between serum perfluorinated chemicals and thyroid function in U.S. adults: the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey 2007-2010.

TL;DR: Higher serum concentrations of PFOA and PFHxS are associated with total T3, total T4, and free T4 in the U.S. general population, and more studies are warranted to clarify the causal relationship.
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The associations between serum perfluorinated chemicals and thyroid function in adolescents and young adults

TL;DR: Serum concentrations of PFNA were associated with serum free T4 levels in adolescents and young adults and mean serum level offree T4 increased significantly across categories (<60th, 60-89 and >90th percentiles) ofPFNA.
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Associations between Levels of Serum Perfluorinated Chemicals and Adiponectin in a Young Hypertension Cohort in Taiwan

TL;DR: Higher serum PFNA concentration is associated with elevated serum adiponectin concentration, and no relationship of PFOA, PFOS, PFUA, and the sum of all four PFCs was found to glucose homeostasis, adip onectin level, lipid profile, and inflammatory markers.
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Negative association between serum perfluorooctane sulfate concentration and bone mineral density in US premenopausal women: NHANES, 2005-2008.

TL;DR: Serum PFOS concentration is associated with decreased total lumbar spine BMD in women not in menopause, however, the potential biological significance of this effect is marginal and subclinical in the general US population.
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Positive association between urinary levels of 8-hydroxydeoxyguanosine and the acrylamide metabolite N-acetyl-S-(propionamide)-cysteine in adolescents and young adults

TL;DR: Higher urinary AAMA concentrations were associated with increased levels of urinary 8-OHdG in this cohort and were significantly associated with males, adolescents, non-current smokers, without alcohol consumption, subjects, body mass index ≥ 24, and homeostasis model assessment of insulin resistance score ≥ 0.9.