Edward L. Peterson
Henry Ford Health System
313 Papers
2.8K Citations
Edward L. Peterson is an academic researcher from Henry Ford Health System. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Population. The author has an hindex of 65, co-authored 301 publications. Previous affiliations of Edward L. Peterson include Wayne State University & Georgia Regents University.
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Papers
Family history, dust mite exposure in early childhood, and risk for pediatric atopy and asthma
TL;DR: Increased exposure during infancy is associated with a higher risk for sensitization in the presence of a positive parental history, but is protective among children of parents without a history of atopic disease.
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Racial differences in physiologic parameters related to asthma among middle-class children.
TL;DR: The data support previous reports of racial differences in lung volume, airway responsiveness, and serum IgE concentrations and suggest that AA children may be predisposed to asthma.
96
Stability and Change in Children's Intelligence Quotient Scores: A Comparison of Two Socioeconomically Disparate Communities
TL;DR: Growing up in a racially segregated and disadvantaged community, more than individual and familial factors, may contribute to a decline in IQ score in the early school years.
95
Profibrotic Role for Interleukin-4 in Cardiac Remodeling and Dysfunction.
Hongmei Peng,Zeyd Sarwar,Xiao Ping Yang,Edward L. Peterson,Jiang Xu,Branislava Janic,Nadia Rhaleb,Oscar A. Carretero,Nour Eddine Rhaleb +8 more
TL;DR: In response to angiotensin II administration, IL-4−/− mice had reduced interstitial myocardial fibrosis and were protected from developing dilated cardiomyopathy, which was seen in WT mice.
93
Recovery of bone mineral density in adolescents following the use of depot medroxyprogesterone acetate contraceptive injections
Zeev Harel,Christine Cole Johnson,Melanie A. Gold,Barbara A. Cromer,Edward L. Peterson,Ronald T. Burkman,Margaret Stager,Robert H. Brown,Ann Bruner,Susan M. Coupey,Paige Hertweck,Henry G. Bone,Kevin Wolter,Anita L. Nelson,Sharon Marshall,Laura K. Bachrach +15 more
TL;DR: BMD loss in female adolescents receiving DMPA for contraception is substantially or fully reversible in most girls following discontinuation of DMPA, with faster recovery at the LS than at the hip.
92