Persistent organic pollutants and endometriosis: Importance of biologic media for defining exposure - the endo study
Germaine M Buck Louis, Zhian Chen, Linda C Giudice
Kurunthachalam Kannan, Patrick J Parsons, C Matthew Peterson, Joseph B Stanford, Rajeshwari Sundaram, Michael W Varner, Mary Croughan , Mary Hediger , Victor Fujimoto , Kannan Kurunthachalam
Author affiliations (6)
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human DevelopmentROR
Persistent organic pollutants (POPs) have been associated with endometriosis, though with equivocal results possibly reflecting choice of biospecimen. We sought to assess this ...
DOI 10.1289/isee.2011.01399 10.1289/isee.2011.01399
Cite this article
Louis, G. B., Peterson, C. M., Croughan, M., Chen, Z., Sundaram, R., Hediger, M., Stanford, J., Varner, M., Giudice, L., Fujimoto, V., Parsons, P., & Kurunthachalam, K. (2011). Persistent organic pollutants and endometriosis: Importance of biologic media for defining exposure - the endo study. *ISEE Conference Abstracts*, *2011*(1). https://doi.org/10.1289/isee.2011.01399
Louis GB, Peterson CM, Croughan M, Chen Z, Sundaram R, Hediger M, et al. Persistent organic pollutants and endometriosis: Importance of biologic media for defining exposure - the endo study. ISEE Conference Abstracts. 2011;2011(1). doi:10.1289/isee.2011.01399
Louis, G. B., et al. "Persistent organic pollutants and endometriosis: Importance of biologic media for defining exposure - the endo study." *ISEE Conference Abstracts*, vol. 2011, no. 1, 2011.