W
Walter Goessler
Researcher at University of Graz
Publications - 375
Citations - 15640
Walter Goessler is an academic researcher from University of Graz. The author has contributed to research in topics: Arsenic & Arsenobetaine. The author has an hindex of 66, co-authored 346 publications receiving 13448 citations. Previous affiliations of Walter Goessler include Johns Hopkins University & De Montfort University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Biovolatilization of antimony and sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS)
TL;DR: It is suggested that normal cot environment conditions are non-optimal for volatilization of antimony by S. brevicaulis, and that Sb2O3 in cot mattress PVC is not bioavailable.
Journal Article
The chemical forms of selenium in selenium nutritional supplements : an investigation by using HPLC/ICP/MS and GF/AAS
TL;DR: In this paper, the total selenium concentration and its chemical forms in the supplements were determined by GF-AAS and HPLC-ICP-MS, and the results showed that the chemical forms of selenion are quite different in supplements.
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Evaluation of cot mattress inner foam as a potential site for microbial generation of toxic gases.
TL;DR: A toxic gas hypothesis for sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) involving polyurethane foam of cot mattresses was proposed and tested experimentally and there was no evidence to suggest that levels of trimethylantimony or total methylantimony forms in cot mattress foams have a causal relation to SIDS.
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Urinary excretion of arsenicals following daily intake of various seafoods during a two weeks intervention.
Marianne Molin,Stine Marie Ulven,Lisbeth Dahl,Walter Goessler,D. Fliegel,M. Holck,Jens Jørgen Sloth,Arne Oshaug,Jan Alexander,Helle Margrete Meltzer,T.A. Ydersbond +10 more
TL;DR: In the cod group, rapid excretion after the single dose was associated with lower total As in blood and less accumulation after two weeks with seafood indicating lower accumulation, and in the blue mussels group only, inorganic As excretion increased significantly, whilst methylarsonate (MA) strongly increased, indicating a possible toxicological concern of repeated mussel consumption.
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Unusual behavior in the reactivity of 5-substituted-1H-tetrazoles in a resistively heated microreactor
Bernhard Gutmann,Toma N. Glasnov,Tahseen Razzaq,Walter Goessler,Dominique M Roberge,C. Oliver Kappe +5 more
TL;DR: The decomposition of 5-benzhydryl-1H-tetrazole in an N-methyl-2-pyrrolidone/acetic acid/water mixture was investigated under a variety of high-temperature reaction conditions and rate constants increased by two orders of magnitude.