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Sir Colin Berry

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Toxicology Letters|April 27, 2021
Corrigendum to "Critique of the "Comment" etitled "Pyrethroid exposure: not so harmless after all" by Demeneix et al. (2020) published in the lancet diabetes endocrinology"Frank A Barile, Sir Colin Berry, Bas Blaauboer, et al.
Toxicology Letters|January 7, 2021
Critique of the "Comment" etitled "Pyrethroid exposure: Not so harmless after all" by Demeneix et al. (2020) published in the lancet diabetes endocrinologyFrank A Barile, Sir Colin Berry, Bas Blaauboer, et al.
Chemico-Biological Interactions|May 7, 2020
Human exposure to synthetic endocrine disrupting chemicals (S-EDCs) is generally negligible as compared to natural compounds with higher or comparable endocrine activity. How to evaluate the risk of the S-EDCs?Herman Autrup, Frank A Barile, Sir Colin Berry, et al.
Toxicology Letters|May 4, 2020
Human exposure to synthetic endocrine disrupting chemicals (S-EDCs) is generally negligible as compared to natural compounds with higher or comparable endocrine activity. How to evaluate the risk of the S-EDCs?Herman Autrup, Frank A Barile, Sir Colin Berry, et al.
Food and Chemical Toxicology : an International Journal Published for the British Industrial Biological Research Association|May 4, 2020
Human exposure to synthetic endocrine disrupting chemicals (S-EDCs) is generally negligible as compared to natural compounds with higher or comparable endocrine activity. How to evaluate the risk of the S-EDCs?Herman Autrup, Frank A Barile, Sir Colin Berry, et al.
Environmental Toxicology and Pharmacology|May 12, 2020
Human exposure to synthetic endocrine disrupting chemicals (S-EDCs) is generally negligible as compared to natural compounds with higher or comparable endocrine activity. How to evaluate the risk of the S-EDCs?Herman Autrup, Frank A Barile, Sir Colin Berry, et al.
Journal of Toxicology and Environmental Health. Part A|June 20, 2020
Human exposure to synthetic endocrine disrupting chemicals (S-EDCs) is generally negligible as compared to natural compounds with higher or comparable endocrine activity. How to evaluate the risk of the S-EDCs?Herman Autrup, Frank A Barile, Sir Colin Berry, et al.
Archives of Toxicology|June 10, 2020
Human exposure to synthetic endocrine disrupting chemicals (S-EDCs) is generally negligible as compared to natural compounds with higher or comparable endocrine activity: how to evaluate the risk of the S-EDCs?Herman Autrup, Frank A Barile, Sir Colin Berry, et al.
Toxicology in Vitro : an International Journal Published in Association with BIBRA|May 4, 2020
Human exposure to synthetic endocrine disrupting chemicals (S-EDCs) is generally negligible as compared to natural compounds with higher or comparable endocrine activity. How to evaluate the risk of the S-EDCs?Herman Autrup, Frank A Barile, Sir Colin Berry, et al.
Archives of Toxicology|August 7, 2021
The EU chemicals strategy for sustainability: in support of the BfR positionFrank A Barile, Sir Colin Berry, Bas Blaauboer, et al.
Pageof 2

Showing results (11-20 of 20) with videos related to

Sort By:
Pageof 2
You have reached the last page of results.This site can display upto 20 results.
Toxicology Letters|April 27, 2021
Corrigendum to "Critique of the "Comment" etitled "Pyrethroid exposure: not so harmless after all" by Demeneix et al. (2020) published in the lancet diabetes endocrinology"Frank A Barile, Sir Colin Berry, Bas Blaauboer, et al.
Toxicology Letters|January 7, 2021
Critique of the "Comment" etitled "Pyrethroid exposure: Not so harmless after all" by Demeneix et al. (2020) published in the lancet diabetes endocrinologyFrank A Barile, Sir Colin Berry, Bas Blaauboer, et al.
Chemico-Biological Interactions|May 7, 2020
Human exposure to synthetic endocrine disrupting chemicals (S-EDCs) is generally negligible as compared to natural compounds with higher or comparable endocrine activity. How to evaluate the risk of the S-EDCs?Herman Autrup, Frank A Barile, Sir Colin Berry, et al.
Toxicology Letters|May 4, 2020
Human exposure to synthetic endocrine disrupting chemicals (S-EDCs) is generally negligible as compared to natural compounds with higher or comparable endocrine activity. How to evaluate the risk of the S-EDCs?Herman Autrup, Frank A Barile, Sir Colin Berry, et al.
Food and Chemical Toxicology : an International Journal Published for the British Industrial Biological Research Association|May 4, 2020
Human exposure to synthetic endocrine disrupting chemicals (S-EDCs) is generally negligible as compared to natural compounds with higher or comparable endocrine activity. How to evaluate the risk of the S-EDCs?Herman Autrup, Frank A Barile, Sir Colin Berry, et al.
Environmental Toxicology and Pharmacology|May 12, 2020
Human exposure to synthetic endocrine disrupting chemicals (S-EDCs) is generally negligible as compared to natural compounds with higher or comparable endocrine activity. How to evaluate the risk of the S-EDCs?Herman Autrup, Frank A Barile, Sir Colin Berry, et al.
Journal of Toxicology and Environmental Health. Part A|June 20, 2020
Human exposure to synthetic endocrine disrupting chemicals (S-EDCs) is generally negligible as compared to natural compounds with higher or comparable endocrine activity. How to evaluate the risk of the S-EDCs?Herman Autrup, Frank A Barile, Sir Colin Berry, et al.
Archives of Toxicology|June 10, 2020
Human exposure to synthetic endocrine disrupting chemicals (S-EDCs) is generally negligible as compared to natural compounds with higher or comparable endocrine activity: how to evaluate the risk of the S-EDCs?Herman Autrup, Frank A Barile, Sir Colin Berry, et al.
Toxicology in Vitro : an International Journal Published in Association with BIBRA|May 4, 2020
Human exposure to synthetic endocrine disrupting chemicals (S-EDCs) is generally negligible as compared to natural compounds with higher or comparable endocrine activity. How to evaluate the risk of the S-EDCs?Herman Autrup, Frank A Barile, Sir Colin Berry, et al.
Archives of Toxicology|August 7, 2021
The EU chemicals strategy for sustainability: in support of the BfR positionFrank A Barile, Sir Colin Berry, Bas Blaauboer, et al.
Pageof 2