Z
Zoreh Davanipour
Researcher at Temple University
Publications - 23
Citations - 906
Zoreh Davanipour is an academic researcher from Temple University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Odds ratio & Stroke. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 23 publications receiving 884 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Occupations with Exposure to Electromagnetic Fields: A Possible Risk Factor for Alzheimer's Disease
Eugene Sobel,Zoreh Davanipour,Raimo Sulkava,Timo Erkinjuntti,Juhani Wikström,Victor W. Henderson,Galen Buckwalter,Joseph D. Bowman,Pey-Jiuan Lee +8 more
TL;DR: Analysis of data from three independent clinical series and controls indicates an association between working in occupations with probable medium to high exposure to extremely low frequency (< 300 Hz) electromagnetic fields and sporadic Alzheimer's disease.
Journal ArticleDOI
Lack of association of apolipoprotein E allele ϵ4 with late‐onset Alzheimer's disease among Finnish centenarians
Eugene Sobel,J. Louhija,Raimo Sulkava,Zoreh Davanipour,Kimmo Kontula,H. Miettinen,Matti J. Tikkanen,K. Kainulainen,Reijo S. Tilvis +8 more
TL;DR: The results clearly show that the ϵ4 allele does not necessarily lead to AD even near the (current) upper age-limit of life and suggest that the association of the ApoE ϵ 4 allele with AD may be age-dependent and that the Apolipoprotein E typeπ4 allele might accelerate the AD dementing process rather than be a direct etiologic agent or a predisposing genetic factor.
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Stroke in the Lehigh Valley: seasonal variation in incidence rates.
Eugene Sobel,Zhongju Zhang,Milton Alter,Sue-Min Lai,Zoreh Davanipour,Gary Friday,R. L. McCoy,T. Isack,L. P. Levitt +8 more
TL;DR: The seasonal pattern of TIA and infarction, but not hemorrhage, fit a sine-cosine wavefunction with a 12-month period (R2 = 41% and 36%, respectively), and the strongest seasonal pattern was exhibited for women of all ages and for both sexes in the age groups 65-74 and 75-84.
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Creutzfeldt‐Jakob disease: Possible medical risk factors
TL;DR: The data suggest that the CJD agent may be acquired by inoculation through injury or during surgery, and perhaps on certain absorbable sutures of animal origin, and the tonometer used for glaucoma testing may also be a vehicle of transmission.
Journal ArticleDOI
Electromagnetic field exposure may cause increased production of amyloid beta and eventually lead to Alzheimer's disease
Eugene Sobel,Zoreh Davanipour +1 more
TL;DR: This work outlined a cascade of events as a hypothesis of how EMF exposure may be associated with AD onset and found elevated risk of AD associated with having a primary occupation likely to have resulted in medium-to-high EMF Exposure.