L
Linda M. Katz
Researcher at Food and Drug Administration
Publications - 8
Citations - 2804
Linda M. Katz is an academic researcher from Food and Drug Administration. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cosmetics & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 6 publications receiving 2675 citations. Previous affiliations of Linda M. Katz include American College of Rheumatology.
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Journal ArticleDOI
American college of rheumatology preliminary definition of improvement in rheumatoid arthritis
David T. Felson,David T. Felson,Jennifer J. Anderson,Jennifer J. Anderson,Maarten Boers,Claire Bombardier,Claire Bombardier,Daniel E. Furst,Daniel E. Furst,Charles H. Goldsmith,Charles H. Goldsmith,Linda M. Katz,Linda M. Katz,Robert W. Lightfoot,Robert W. Lightfoot,Harold E. Paulus,Harold E. Paulus,Vibeke Strand,Vibeke Strand,Peter Tugwell,Peter Tugwell,Michael E. Weinblatt,Michael E. Weinblatt,H. James Williams,H. James Williams,Frederick Wolfe,Stephanie Kieszak +26 more
TL;DR: The results suggest that the definition of improvement presented is statistically powerful and does not identify a large percentage of placebo-treated patients as being improved, which the authors hope will be used widely in RA trials.
Journal ArticleDOI
A medical-toxicological view of tattooing
Peter Laux,Tewes Tralau,Jutta Tentschert,Annegret Blume,Sascha Al Dahouk,Wolfgang Bäumler,Eric Bernstein,Beatrice Bocca,Alessandro Alimonti,Helen Colebrook,Christa de Cuyper,Lars Dähne,Urs Hauri,Paul C. Howard,Paul P. Janssen,Linda M. Katz,Bruce Klitzman,Nicolas Kluger,Lars Krutak,Thomas Platzek,Victoria Scott-Lang,Jørgen Serup,Wera Teubner,Ines Schreiver,Elena Wilkniß,Andreas Luch +25 more
TL;DR: Concerns are the potential for phototoxicity, substance migration, and the possible metabolic conversion of tattoo ink ingredients into toxic substances, which apply to cleavage products that are formed during laser-assisted tattoo removal.
Journal ArticleDOI
Reduced joint counts in rheumatoid arthritis clinical trials
David T. Felson,Jennifer Anddrson,Maarten Boers,Claire Bombarier,Daniel E. Furst,Charles H. Goldsmith,Robert W. Lightfoot,Harold E. Paulus,Peter Tugwell,Michael E. Weinblatt,Linda M. Katz,H. James Williams,Fredrick Wolf +12 more
Journal Article
Dihydroxyacetone: A Review.
TL;DR: With the wide-spread use of DHA, additional studies on its safety are warranted, and the FDA recommends customers shield their eyes, lips, and mucous membranes, as well as refrain from ingestion or inhalation of D HA.
Journal ArticleDOI
Regulation of Cosmetics in the United States.
TL;DR: In the United States, cosmetics are regulated under the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act and the Fair Packaging and Labeling Act as discussed by the authors , and ingredients, with the exception of color additives, are not subject to pre-market approval.