Matthew Rees
University of South Australia
9 Papers
196 Citations
Matthew Rees is an academic researcher from University of South Australia. The author has contributed to research in topics: Bioavailability & Soil water. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 9 publications. Previous affiliations of Matthew Rees include South Australia Pathology.
Chat about Author
Papers
In Vivo Assessment of Arsenic Bioavailability in Rice and Its Significance for Human Health Risk Assessment
Albert L. Juhasz,Euan Smith,John Weber,Matthew Rees,Allan Rofe,Tim Kuchel,Lloyd Sansom,Ravi Naidu +7 more
TL;DR: The results indicate that arsenic bioavailability in rice is highly dependent on arsenic speciation, which in turn can vary depending on rice cultivar, arsenic in irrigation water, and the presence and nature of arsenic speciating in cooking water.
265
Assessment of Four Commonly Employed in Vitro Arsenic Bioaccessibility Assays for Predicting in Vivo Relative Arsenic Bioavailability in Contaminated Soils
Albert L. Juhasz,John Weber,Euan Smith,Ravi Naidu,Matthew Rees,Allan Rofe,Tim Kuchel,Lloyd Sansom +7 more
TL;DR: Comparison of in vitro and in vivo results demonstrated that the in vitro assay encompassing the SBRC gastric phase provided the best prediction of in vivo relative As bioavailability.
197
In vitro assessment of arsenic bioaccessibility in contaminated (anthropogenic and geogenic) soils.
Albert L. Juhasz,Euan Smith,John Weber,Matthew Rees,Allan Rofe,Tim Kuchel,Lloyd Sansom,Ravi Naidu +7 more
TL;DR: In all but three soils, As bioaccessibility was less than 50% indicating that a significant proportion of the total As concentration may not be available for absorption in the gastrointestinal tract following incidental soil ingestion.
145
Effect of soil ageing on in vivo arsenic bioavailability in two dissimilar soils.
Albert L. Juhasz,Euan Smith,John Weber,Ravi Naidu,Matthew Rees,Allan Rofe,Tim Kuchel,Lloyd Sansom +7 more
TL;DR: Sequential fractionation, however, indicated that there was repartitioning of As within the soil fractions extracted during the time course investigated, indicating that natural attenuation may be only applicable for As in soils containing specific mineralogical properties.
74
Principles and application of an in vivo swine assay for the determination of arsenic bioavailability in contaminated matrices.
Matthew Rees,Lloyd Sansom,Allan Rofe,Albert L. Juhasz,Euan Smith,John Weber,Ravi Naidu,Ravi Naidu,Tim Kuchel +8 more
TL;DR: This paper describes, with examples, surgical, experimental design and analytical issues associated with performing chronic and acute in vivo swine assays to determine As bioavailability in contaminated soil and food.
49