Gail Runnells
Researcher
University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences
faculty
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Biography and Research Information
OverviewAI-generated summary
Gail Runnells' research investigates the association between environmental exposures and health outcomes, with a particular focus on cancer risk and obesity among women in Southern states. Her work has explored the link between low-level environmental heavy metals and obesity in postmenopausal women, and carcinogenic air pollutants and breast cancer risk in rural Arkansas communities. Runnells has also studied the impact of cumulative arsenic exposure on individual arsenic levels and its association with genome-wide DNA methylation. Her research network includes collaborators at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, such as Shelbie Stahr and Lora J. Rogers, with whom she has co-authored multiple publications. Runnells' scholarship metrics include an h-index of 5 and 106 total citations.
Metrics
- h-index: 5
- Publications: 24
- Citations: 106
Selected Publications
- Carcinogenic air pollutants and breast cancer risk in the Arkansas rural community health study: A nested case-control study (2025) DOI
- Cumulative arsenic exposure from residential histories and its association with individual arsenic levels in saliva (2024) DOI
- Early-Onset Breast Cancer and Geospatial Indicators of Exposures in the Arkansas Rural Community Health Study (ARCH) (2023) DOI
- Genome-wide DNA methylation landscape associated with high arsenic exposure (2023) DOI
- Abstract 1443: Environmental heavy metal toxicity and mammographic breast density in a Mississippi Delta southern state (2022) DOI
- Abstract 1450: Interactions of <i>DNMTs</i> genetic variants associated with breast cancer risk (2022) DOI
- Low-Level Environmental Heavy Metals are Associated with Obesity Among Postmenopausal Women in a Southern State (2021) DOI
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