NanoLINEN: Nanotoxicology Link Between India and European Nations

2011 
Alok Dhawan1, Rishi Shanker1, Blanca Laffon2, Juan Fernandez Tajes2, Dietmar Fuchs3, Gert van der Laan4, Pieter van Broekhuizen5, Heidi Becker6, Heinz-Jorn Moriske6, Joao P. F. Teixeira7, Marie Carriere8, Nathalie Herlin-Boime8, Ayse Basak Engin9, Erdem Coskun9, and Bensu Karahalil9 1Nanomaterial Toxicology Group, Indian Institute of Toxicology Research (CSIR, India), P. O. Box 80, M. G. Marg, Lucknow 226001, India 2Toxicology Unit, University of ACoruna, Campus Elvina s/n, A Coruna 15071, Spain 3Division of Biological Chemistry, Medical University, Innsbruck 6020, Austria 4Netherlands Center for Occupational Diseases, Coronal Institute for Occupational Health, University of Amsterdam, Tafelbergweg 51, P. O. Box 22660, Amsterdam 1100DD, The Netherlands 5IVAM UvA, Nanotechnology and Chemical Risks, Postbus 18180, NL-1001ZB Amsterdam, The Netherlands 6The Section of Toxicology and Health-Related Environmental Monitoring, The Federal Environment Agency (UBA), P. O. Box 1406, Dessau-Roblau 06813, Germany 7Environmental Health Department, National Institute of Health, Rua Alexandre Herculano, 321, 4000-055 Porto, Portugal 8Nanometric Structure Group, Matter Science Division and Laboratoire de Structure et dynamique par Resonnance Magnetique, CEA, 91191, France 9Gazi University, Faculty of Pharmacy, Department of Toxicology, 06330 Ankara, Turkey
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    0
    References
    1
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []