Chances are, if you've taken a birth control pill, you've already taken a very small dose of a testosterone derivative, points out reproductive
endocrinologist David P. Cohen, MD, chief of the section of reproductive endocrinology and infertility at the University of Chicago.
Seeking a better understanding of the hormone, University of Washington
endocrinologist David Cummings compared ghrelin levels in people who had lost considerable amounts of weight through diet with those who shed pounds by means of gastric bypass surgery — a technique that reduces the capacity of the stomach and seems to damage its ghrelin - producing capacity as well.
In a sense, the postop bacterial changes are not surprising, says
endocrinologist David Cummings at the University of Washington, Seattle, (although he notes it's a «herculean feat» to manage gastric bypass surgery in animals as tiny as mice).
Not exact matches
Sami
David, MD, a reproductive
endocrinologist and pregnancy loss specialist in New York City, says the emotional aftermath of a miscarriage or stillbirth doesn't just go away when you achieve a healthy pregnancy; it stays with you.
One panelist was
David Furlow, a University of California at Davis
endocrinologist with extensive experience in rat - strain variations and how they can affect outcomes in the lab.
If you're dealing with the mood swings brought on by fertility treatments, Sami S.
David, MD, a reproductive
endocrinologist at Fifth Avenue Fertility Center in New York, told us that taking vitamin B6 (about 100 mg) and calcium carbonate (about 600 mg) can help.
Endocrinologist, researcher, Professor of Pediatrics at Harvard Medical School, and Professor of Nutrition at the Harvard School of Public Health Dr.
David Ludwig is our special 2016 Metabolic Therapeutics Conference guest speaker featured in Episode...