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IARC Monographs on the Evaluation of Carcinogenic Risks to Humans. Volume 98: Painting, Firefighting and Shiftwork. International Agency for Research on Cancer

Keith T Palmer
- 01 Oct 2011 - 
- Vol. 61, Iss: 7, pp 521-522
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This article is published in Occupational Medicine.The article was published on 2011-10-01 and is currently open access. It has received 352 citations till now.

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Worldwide human papillomavirus genotype attribution in over 2000 cases of intraepithelial and invasive lesions of the vulva

Silvia de Sanjosé, +52 more
TL;DR: Combined data from HPV-DNA and p16(INK4a) testing are likely to represent a closer estimate of the real fraction of IVC induced by HPV, indicating that HPV contribution in invasive vulvar cancer has probably been overestimated.
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Ingested nitrate and nitrite and stomach cancer risk: An updated review

TL;DR: A critical review of the animal toxicology literature of nitrite indicates that in the absence of co-administration of a carcinogenic nitrosamine precursor, there is no evidence for carcinogenesis and this new and growing body of evidence calls for a reconsideration of nitrites and nitrate safety.
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Research progress of heavy metal pollution in China: Sources, analytical methods, status, and toxicity

TL;DR: Wang et al. as discussed by the authors reviewed the pollution of heavy metals in China focusing on the following four aspects: current status of heavy metal pollution in China, sources of heavy MET, toxicity and potential risk, and possible reduction strategies.
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Update of the reference and HBM values derived by the German Human Biomonitoring Commission.

TL;DR: The German Human Biomonitoring Commission has derived new and updated reference values for PFOS and PFOA in human plasma, for thallium in urine, and for aromatic amines in urine for a comprehensive number of phthalate metabolites in urine and for organochlorine pesticides in human breast milk.
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Alkaline residues and the environment: A review of impacts, management practices and opportunities

TL;DR: The potential for recovery of metals critical to e-technologies, such as vanadium, cobalt, lithium and rare earths, from alkaline residues is considered in this paper.
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