Recent manuscripts
Archive
About
Aims and Scope
Editorial Board
Open Access
Indexing
Contact us
Editorial Policies
Authorship & COI
Publication Ethics
Data Policies
Supporting Diversity
Instructions to Authors
Instructions to authors (PDF)
Manuscript Types
Manuscript Formatting
Professional Editing Service
How to submit
Supplements & Special Issues
Preprints
TID on Twitter
Recent manuscripts
Archive
About
Aims and Scope
Editorial Board
Open Access
Indexing
Contact us
Editorial Policies
Authorship & COI
Publication Ethics
Data Policies
Supporting Diversity
Instructions to Authors
Instructions to authors (PDF)
Manuscript Types
Manuscript Formatting
Professional Editing Service
How to submit
Supplements & Special Issues
Preprints
TID on Twitter
Recent manuscripts
Archive
About
Aims and Scope
Editorial Board
Open Access
Indexing
Contact us
Editorial Policies
Authorship & COI
Publication Ethics
Data Policies
Supporting Diversity
Instructions to Authors
Instructions to authors (PDF)
Manuscript Types
Manuscript Formatting
Professional Editing Service
How to submit
Supplements & Special Issues
Preprints
TID on Twitter
Author
Harel Levi
RESEARCH PAPER
Oral White Lesions Associated with Chewing Khat
Meir Gorsky
,
Joel B. Epstein
,
Harel Levi
,
Noam Yarom
Tobacco Induced Diseases 2004;2(September):145
DOI
:
https://doi.org/10.1186/1617-9625-2-3-145
Stats
Abstract
Article
(PDF)
Submit your paper
Archive
Events
Leadership Summit on Tobacco Control
Virtual Summit, 06.05.2021 - 07.05.2021
13th Asia Pacific Conference on Tobacco or Health (APACT)
Bangkok, 02.09.2021 - 04.09.2021
18th World Conference on Tobacco or Health (WCTOH)
Dublin, 08.03.2022 - 10.03.2022
Most read
Month
Year
Smokers with a high normal heart rate (80-99/min) found their life span shortened by 13 years
Menthol and flavor capsule cigarettes in the Philippines: A comparison of pack design
Smoking and COVID-19: Did we overlook representativeness?
Month
Year
Smoking and COVID-19: Did we overlook representativeness?
COVID-19 and smoking: A systematic review of the evidence
Smokers with a high normal heart rate (80-99/min) found their life span shortened by 13 years
Indexes
Keywords index
Topics index
Authors index