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Marie-Abele Bind

Researcher at Harvard University

Publications -  79
Citations -  2653

Marie-Abele Bind is an academic researcher from Harvard University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Causal inference. The author has an hindex of 22, co-authored 63 publications receiving 1844 citations. Previous affiliations of Marie-Abele Bind include University of London.

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Cardiovascular effects of air pollution.

TL;DR: Experimental studies indicate that some pollutants have more harmful cardiovascular effects, such as combustion-derived PM2.5 and ultrafine particles, and promotion of safer air quality appears to be a new challenge in cardiovascular disease prevention.
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Air pollution and markers of coagulation, inflammation, and endothelial function : associations and epigene-environment interactions in an elderly cohort

TL;DR: The air pollution effect was stronger among subjects having higher Alu, lower LINE-1, tissue factor, or TLR-2 methylation status, indicating that epigenetic states can convey susceptibility to air pollution.
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Air pollution and gene-specific methylation in the Normative Aging Study: Association, effect modification, and mediation analysis

TL;DR: Ass associations between air pollution exposure and gene-specific methylation in 777 elderly men participating in the Normative Aging Study are investigated and some significant mediated effects of black carbon on fibrinogen through a decrease in F3 methylation are found.
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The impact of outdoor air pollution on COVID-19: a review of evidence from in vitro , animal, and human studies.

TL;DR: Wang et al. as mentioned in this paper provided evidence from in vitro, animal and human studies from the existing literature, which showed that exposure to air pollution leads to a decreased immune response, thus facilitating viral penetration and replication.
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Long-Term Exposure to Ambient Fine Particulate Matter and Renal Function in Older Men: The Veterans Administration Normative Aging Study

TL;DR: The hypothesis that long-term PM2.5 exposure negatively affects renal function and increases renal function decline is supported in this longitudinal sample of older men.