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Discover Ludwig"sporadic exposure" is a correct and usable phrase in written English
It can be used to describe an isolated or intermittent exposure to something, or the act of occasionally or randomly coming into contact with something. For example, "The student had sporadic exposure to language classes throughout his childhood."
Exact(8)
Such sporadic exposure perhaps explains why Cassidy's name can still draw a blank even among people who consider themselves knowledgeable about popular music, or why the question "Who is this?" frequently comes up when one of her recordings is played.
Meanwhile, sporadic exposure in large group settings yields suboptimal proficiency.
Thus, sporadic exposure peaks among workers have been possible.
However, even sporadic exposure to unsafe water can limit health gains (43).
The principal estimate of 339,000 annual deaths is composed of 81% mortality due to chronic exposure and 19% due to sporadic exposure.
Both controlled and epidemiologic research studies will help clarify the impact of sporadic exposure to swine emissions on health symptoms of persons who are involuntarily exposed intermittently to malodors.
Similar(52)
Quantifying exposures to the nonpersistent compounds listed in Table 1 in Needham et al. (2005) will be difficult, particularly in instances of multimedia sources and sporadic exposures such as the nonpersistent pesticides when exposures are variable.
Hair nicotine from 1 cm of hair measures exposure over the previous month, therefore it is also possible that subjective recall was of distant or sporadic exposures not reflected in hair nicotine.
In conclusion, our study suggests that a low but substantive proportion of LBM poultry workers in Bangladesh become infected with H5N1 virus after unprotected, ongoing sporadic exposures to H5N1 virus infected poultry and virus-contaminated environments of LBMs.
Sporadic acute exposures or long-term exposure to low levels (e.g., as little as 10 μg/day) of PAs can lead to delayed toxicity (Australia New Zealand Food Authority 2001; Molyneux et al. 1988) (up to 1 or more years after exposure) and could therefore escape causal suspicion or elude measurement.
However, because of its sporadic occurrence, exposure to particulate Pb in drinking water is especially difficult to characterize [27].
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com