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Jeffrey C Lodwick

from Salt Lake City, UT
Age ~53

Jeffrey Lodwick Phones & Addresses

  • 2360 E Bernadine Dr, Salt Lake Cty, UT 84109 (801) 403-7615
  • Salt Lake City, UT
  • 1616 Angels Way, Kaysville, UT 84037
  • Taylorsville, UT
  • 3418 Ruther Ave, Cincinnati, OH 45220

Resumes

Resumes

Jeffrey Lodwick Photo 1

Health Physicist

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Location:
Salt Lake City, UT
Industry:
Government Administration
Work:
Us Dol Osha
Health Physicist
Jeffrey Lodwick Photo 2

Jeffrey Lodwick

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Business Records

Name / Title
Company / Classification
Phones & Addresses
Jeffrey Lodwick
QUEST HEALTHCARE GROUP OF LIMA, LLC
Jeffrey Lodwick
QUEST URGENT CARE OF DAYTON LLC
Jeffrey Lodwick
QUEST TOTAL WELLNESS LLC

Publications

Us Patents

Design Of A Calibration Phantom For In Vivo Measurement Of Stable Lead Or Radioactivity In Bone

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US Patent:
6362471, Mar 26, 2002
Filed:
May 14, 1999
Appl. No.:
09/312242
Inventors:
Henry B. Spitz - Cincinnati OH
Mark Jenkins - Franklin OH
Robert Bornschein - Park Hills KY
Jeffrey Lodwick - Franklin OH
Assignee:
University of Cincinnati - Cincinnati OH
International Classification:
A61B 600
US Classification:
2502521, 378207
Abstract:
The hazards of exposure to heavy metal contamination, examples of which arsenic, beryllium, lead, cadmium, chromium, nickel, zinc, mercury and barium, and the radioactive substances which deposit in human bone, examples of which are uranium, plutonium, and americium, are very serious and are well known to scientific and medical professionals. Since lead is a prevalent metal contaminant which deposits in human bone, and its effects are quite hazardous, especially to young children, the focus of this disclosure will be on methods of detecting lead exposure. While it is possible to detect the level of lead in the body through the use of a blood test, the relevancy of such tests is limited, since the risk to humans from lead exposure is related to the amount of lead deposited in the bones of the exposed person and not, necessarily, the amount in the blood. Moreover, drawing blood causes some discomfort on the part of the person being tested, which is especially difficult with small children, who are particularly at risk to lead exposure due to various environmental factors. Accordingly, an alternative method, the indirect measure of the level of cumulative lead exposure in the bones of a person by sue of x-ray fluorescence, is often employed.
Jeffrey C Lodwick from Salt Lake City, UT, age ~53 Get Report