9 research outputs found

    Radiation and breast cancer: a review of current evidence

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    This paper summarizes current knowledge on ionizing radiation-associated breast cancer in the context of established breast cancer risk factors, the radiation dose–response relationship, and modifiers of dose response, taking into account epidemiological studies and animal experiments. Available epidemiological data support a linear dose–response relationship down to doses as low as about 100 mSv. However, the magnitude of risk per unit dose depends strongly on when radiation exposure occurs: exposure before the age of 20 years carries the greatest risk. Other characteristics that may influence the magnitude of dose-specific risk include attained age (that is, age at observation for risk), age at first full-term birth, parity, and possibly a history of benign breast disease, exposure to radiation while pregnant, and genetic factors

    Die Arnold-Chiarische Mi�bildung im Rahmen der dysrhaphischen �quivalente des Gro�hirns und des Kleinhirns

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    The prehistory of Island Southeast Asia: A multidisciplinary review of recent research

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    Die Einzelformen der Verbildungen

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    Enigmatic Cranial Superstructures among Chamorro Ancestors from the Mariana Islands: Comparative Geographic Variation and a Proposal About Their Meaning

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    A standardised classification scheme for the Mid-Holocene Toalean artefacts of South Sulawesi, Indonesia

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