Pages that link to "Q73340002"
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The following pages link to Neuroendocrine responses following graded traumatic brain injury in male adults (Q73340002):
Displaying 33 items.
- Pituitary and/or hypothalamic dysfunction following moderate to severe traumatic brain injury: Current perspectives (Q26773543) (← links)
- Pituitary dysfunction following traumatic brain injury: clinical perspectives (Q26801303) (← links)
- Effects of antioxidant treatment on blast-induced brain injury (Q30447343) (← links)
- A closed literature-based discovery technique finds a mechanistic link between hypogonadism and diminished sleep quality in aging men. (Q34147400) (← links)
- Heightening of the stress response during the first weeks after a mild traumatic brain injury (Q34625284) (← links)
- Neurosurgical Hyponatremia (Q35750524) (← links)
- Effects of acute restraint-induced stress on glucocorticoid receptors and brain-derived neurotrophic factor after mild traumatic brain injury (Q35980803) (← links)
- High risk of hypogonadism after traumatic brain injury: clinical implications (Q36392902) (← links)
- Endocrine failure after traumatic brain injury in adults (Q36588891) (← links)
- Restoration of neuroendocrine stress response by glucocorticoid receptor or GABA(A) receptor antagonists after experimental traumatic brain injury (Q37019280) (← links)
- Gender and the injured brain (Q37118667) (← links)
- Does serum osmolarity change as a result of the reflex neuroprotective mechanism of cerebral osmo-regulation after minor head trauma? (Q37151711) (← links)
- Diffuse traumatic brain injury affects chronic corticosterone function in the rat (Q37212948) (← links)
- Biomarkers of blast-induced neurotrauma: profiling molecular and cellular mechanisms of blast brain injury. (Q37473431) (← links)
- Trauma and the endocrine system (Q37789933) (← links)
- Mechanisms of Primary Blast-Induced Traumatic Brain Injury: Insights from Shock-Wave Research (Q37844571) (← links)
- Exercise After Traumatic Brain Injury: Is it a Double‐Edged Sword? (Q37894211) (← links)
- The pathophysiology of concussions in youth (Q37952410) (← links)
- Traumatic brain injury: endocrine consequences in children and adults (Q38136999) (← links)
- Low Tri-Iodothyronine Syndrome in Neurosurgical Patients: A Systematic Review of Literature (Q38906605) (← links)
- Early enteral nutrition positively influences endocrine function in traumatic brain injury patients. (Q42578825) (← links)
- Endocrine function in children acutely following severe traumatic brain injury (Q43236029) (← links)
- Military- and sports-related mild traumatic brain injury: clinical presentation, management, and long-term consequences (Q44165795) (← links)
- Cortisol dynamics following acute severe brain injury (Q44892808) (← links)
- Luteinizing Hormone and Testosterone Levels during Acute Phase of Severe Traumatic Brain Injury: Prognostic Implications for Adult Male Patients. (Q50300613) (← links)
- A Tilted Axis: Maladaptive Inflammation and HPA Axis Dysfunction Contribute to Consequences of TBI (Q64093581) (← links)
- Neuroendocrine Whiplash: Slamming the Breaks on Anabolic-Androgenic Steroids Following Repetitive Mild Traumatic Brain Injury in Rats May Worsen Outcomes (Q64256832) (← links)
- [Assessment of hypothalamo-pituitary axis in early phase of severe cranioencephalic brain injury] (Q82958426) (← links)
- Endocrinopathy After Traumatic Brain Injury (Q83607856) (← links)
- Epidemiology of Pediatric Traumatic Brain Injury and Hypothalamic-Pituitary Disorders in Arizona (Q89620640) (← links)
- Sleep disruption exacerbates and prolongs the inflammatory response to traumatic brain injury (Q90272743) (← links)
- Lifelong consequences of brain injuries during development: From risk to resilience (Q90330842) (← links)
- Peripheral blood neuroendocrine hormones are associated with clinical indices of sport-related concussion (Q91825621) (← links)