68 results on '"Juhász, Ã .L."'
Search Results
2. Health risk assessment of dietary cadmium exposure based on cadmium bioavailability in food: Opportunities and challenges
3. Soil amendments reduce PFAS bioaccumulation in Eisenia fetida following exposure to AFFF-impacted soil
4. Arsenic, cadmium, lead, antimony bioaccessibility and relative bioavailability in legacy gold mining waste
5. Remediation options to reduce bioaccessible and bioavailable lead and arsenic at a smelter impacted site - consideration of treatment efficacy
6. Contributions of contamination sources to soil lead concentrations of a smelter-affected community in South Australia, Australia
7. Alcohol consumption promotes arsenic absorption but reduces tissue arsenic accumulation in mice
8. Impact of precursors and bioaccessibility on childhood PFAS exposure from house dust
9. Microplastics affect arsenic bioavailability by altering gut microbiota and metabolites in a mouse model
10. Modelling of PFAS-surface interactions: Effect of surface charge and solution ions
11. Metallic mangroves: Sediments and in situ diffusive gradients in thin films (DGTs) reveal Avicennia marina (Forssk.) Vierh. lives with high contamination near a lead‑zinc smelter in South Australia
12. Effects of various Fe compounds on the bioavailability of Pb contained in orally ingested soils in mice: Mechanistic insights and health implications
13. Impact of smelter re-development on spatial and temporal airborne Pb concentrations
14. Application of soil amendments for reducing PFAS leachability and bioavailability
15. Cadmium oral bioavailability is affected by calcium and phytate contents in food: Evidence from leafy vegetables in mice
16. Plumbojarosite formation in contaminated soil to mitigate childhood exposure to lead, arsenic and antimony
17. Antibiotic exposure decreases soil arsenic oral bioavailability in mice by disrupting ileal microbiota and metabolic profile
18. Insights into the fate of antimony (Sb) in contaminated soils: Ageing influence on Sb mobility, bioavailability, bioaccessibility and speciation
19. Geogenic nickel exposure from food consumption and soil ingestion: A bioavailability based assessment
20. Correlation between lead speciation and inhalation bioaccessibility using two different simulated lung fluids
21. Influence of household smoking habits on inhalation bioaccessibility of trace elements and light rare earth elements in Canadian house dust
22. Arsanilic acid contributes more to total arsenic than roxarsone in chicken meat from Chinese markets
23. Relationship between Pb relative bioavailability and bioaccessibility in phosphate amended soil: Uncertainty associated with predicting Pb immobilization efficacy using in vitro assays
24. Response of the fungal community to chronic petrogenic contamination in surface and subsurface soils
25. Inhalation bioaccessibility of PAHs in PM2.5: Implications for risk assessment and toxicity prediction
26. Coupling bioavailability and stable isotope ratio to discern dietary and non-dietary contribution of metal exposure to residents in mining-impacted areas
27. Metals in paints on chopsticks: Solubilization in simulated saliva, gastric, and food solutions and implication for human health
28. Food influence on lead relative bioavailability in contaminated soils: Mechanisms and health implications
29. Can in vitro assays account for interactions between inorganic co-contaminants observed during in vivo relative bioavailability assessment?
30. Influence of sample matrix on the bioavailability of arsenic, cadmium and lead during co-contaminant exposure
31. Photoelectrical response of mesoporous nickel oxide decorated with size controlled platinum nanoparticles under argon and oxygen gas
32. Lead relative bioavailability in soils based on different endpoints of a mouse model
33. Influence of co-contaminant exposure on the absorption of arsenic, cadmium and lead
34. Biochar increases arsenic release from an anaerobic paddy soil due to enhanced microbial reduction of iron and arsenic
35. A critical review of approaches and limitations of inhalation bioavailability and bioaccessibility of metal(loid)s from ambient particulate matter or dust
36. Oral relative bioavailability of Dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT) in contaminated soil and its prediction using in vitro strategies for exposure refinement
37. Assessment of arsenic speciation and bioaccessibility in mine-impacted materials
38. Using in vitro bioaccessibility to refine estimates of human exposure to PAHs via incidental soil ingestion
39. Comparison of arsenic bioaccessibility in housedust and contaminated soils based on four in vitro assays
40. Predicting PAH bioremediation efficacy using bioaccessibility assessment tools: Validation of PAH biodegradation–bioaccessibility correlations
41. The application of a carrier-based bioremediation strategy for marine oil spills
42. Potential impact of soil microbial heterogeneity on the persistence of hydrocarbons in contaminated subsurface soils
43. In vivo measurement, in vitro estimation and fugacity prediction of PAH bioavailability in post-remediated creosote-contaminated soil
44. Influence of in vitro assay pH and extractant composition on As bioaccessibility in contaminated soils
45. Bioaccessibility-based predictions for estimating PAH biodegradation efficacy – Comparison of model predictions and measured endpoints
46. Assessing impediments to hydrocarbon biodegradation in weathered contaminated soils
47. A polyphasic approach for assessing the suitability of bioremediation for the treatment of hydrocarbon-impacted soil
48. Carrier mounted bacterial consortium facilitates oil remediation in the marine environment
49. Impact of bacterial and fungal processes on 14C-hexadecane mineralisation in weathered hydrocarbon contaminated soil
50. Influence of saliva, gastric and intestinal phases on the prediction of As relative bioavailability using the Unified Bioaccessibility Research Group of Europe Method (UBM)
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