Charlene Franz
University of Massachusetts Medical School
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Featured researches published by Charlene Franz.
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 1980
Christopher Longcope; Richard Hunter; Charlene Franz
The concentrations of certain steroids in arterial and ovarian venous blood were measured in 42 postmenopausal women undergoing hysterectomy for uterine disease. A concentration gradient across the ovary was found for testosterone in 21 women, for androstenedione in 16, for estradiol in 15, for estrone in 8, and for dehydroepiandrosterone in 3. On the basis of postualated ovarian blood blow the gradient would result in a major contribution to the blood production rate for testosterone in about 50% of women and for estradiol in less than 20%. For androstenedione, dehydroepiandrosterone, and estrone the gradients did not signify important ovarian secretion. There was no evidence for secretion of dihydrotestosterone, estrone sulfate, or dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate. There were no apparent clinical correlates to indicate in which women the ovary was secreting steroids.
Cancer Causes & Control | 1994
Joanne F. Dorgan; Marsha E. Reichman; Joseph T. Judd; Charles C. Brown; Christopher Longcope; Arthur Schatzkin; William S. Campbell; Charlene Franz; Lisa Kahle; Philip R. Taylor
We undertook a cross-sectional study in 107 premenopausal women in Maryland (United States) of alcohol intake and hormonal status in order to evaluate whether plasma hormone levels might mediate the reported positive relation between alcohol ingestion and breast cancer risk. Alcohol ingestion was estimated using a drinking pattern questionnaire, a food frequency questionnaire, and seven-day food records. Fasting blood specimens were collected on days 5–7, 12–15, and 21–23 of each participants menstrual cycle and pooled to create follicular, midcycle, and luteal phase samples, respectively, for analysis. Estrone, estrone sulfate, estradiol, androstenedione, and dehydropiandrosterone sulfate (DHEAS) in plasma were measured by radioimmunoassay, and sex-hormone binding globulin (SHBG) was measured by an immunoradiometric assay. After adjusting for age, weight, and total energy intake, alcohol ingestion was not associated with plasma estrogens in the follicular, midcycle, or luteal phases of the menstrual cycle, nor with the level of SHBG or DHEAS in plasma averaged from the three phases of the cycle. Alcohol, however, was significantly positively associated with the average level of plasma androstenedione. Based on these cross-sectional findings among premenopausal women, the increased risk of breast cancer related to alcohol ingestion does not appear to be mediated by elevated plasma estrogen levels. Androstenedione, however, may mediate the alcohol/breast cancer-association.
Cancer Causes & Control | 1995
Joanne F. Dorgan; Marsha E. Reichman; Joseph T. Judd; Charles C. Brown; Christopher Longcope; Arthur Schatzkin; Demetrius Albanes; William S. Campbell; Charlene Franz; Lisa Kahle; Philip R. Taylor
We analyzed data from a cross-sectional study of 107 premenopausal women to evaluate the relations of height, weight, and body mass index (BMI) with plasma hormone levels. Participants were 20- to 40-year old women residing in Maryland (United States), whose reported menstrual cycle lengths were not more than 35 days and whose measured weights for height were 85 to 130 percent of ‘desirable’ based on 1983 Metropolitan Life Insurance tables. Fasting blood specimens were collected on each of days 5–7, 12–15, and 21–23 of every participants menstrual cycle and pooled to create follicular, midcycle, and luteal phase samples, respectively, for analysis. Adjusted for age, taller women had significantly higher follicular-phase plasma-estradiol levels percent difference/cm=1.5, 95 percent confidence interval [CI]=0.3–2.7, and heavier women had significantly lower plasma sex-hormone binding globulin (SHBG) levels averaged across the menstrual cycle phases (percent difference/kg=−1.2; CI=−1.9–0.6). Body weight within the range studied, however, was not related significantly to the concentration of SHBG-bound estradiol during any phase of the menstrual cycle. The results of this cross-sectional study suggest a possible mechanism by which height may influence breast cancer risk.
Menopause | 2002
Lynnette Leidy Sievert; Robert R. Freedman; Jesus Zarain Garcia; Jennifer Foster; Ma. del Carmen Romano Soriano; Christopher Longcope; Charlene Franz
ObjectiveTo measure hot flashes by sternal skin conductance in an urban Mexican population and to determine variables associated with hot flash reporting and measurement. DesignFrom June 1999 to August 2000, 67 perimenopausal women aged 40 to 65 years participated in interviews, anthropometric measures, and a 2-h recording of sternal skin conductance. Changes in sweating were used to demonstrate the presence/absence of a hot flash. During the test, women were asked to report if they experienced a hot flash. ResultsDuring the study period, 10 women reported and demonstrated every hot flash, 24 women never reported or demonstrated a hot flash, 7 demonstrated hot flashes but did not report any of them, 7 reported hot flashes but did not demonstrate any of them, and 19 showed a mixture of responses. Women who demonstrated hot flashes by sternal skin conductance were measured in a warmer room, had more years of education, consumed more eggs as a child, recalled a heavier weight at age 18, and had a lower body mass index at interview compared with women who did not demonstrate hot flashes by sternal skin conductance. Women who subjectively reported hot flashes were measured in a warmer room, were more likely to be postmenopausal, reported more frequent consumption of coffee, and spent fewer months breast-feeding their last child compared with women who did not report the experience of hot flashes during the testing period. ConclusionRoom temperature explained part of the variation between women who did and did not demonstrate hot flashes via sternal skin conductance, between women who did and did not report the experience of hot flashes, and between women who did and did not demonstrate concordance in objective and subjective measures. In addition to room temperature, coffee intake, months spent breast-feeding the last child, and recalled weight at age 18 were important variables predicting hot flash experience.
Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention | 1996
Joanne F. Dorgan; Christopher Longcope; Hugh E. Stephenson; Roni T. Falk; Rosetta Miller; Charlene Franz; Lisa Kahle; William S. Campbell; Joseph A. Tangrea; Arthur Schatzkin
The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition | 1996
Joanne F. Dorgan; Joseph T. Judd; Christopher Longcope; Charles C. Brown; Arthur Schatzkin; Beverly A. Clevidence; William S. Campbell; Padmanabhan P. Nair; Charlene Franz; Lisa Kahle; Philip R. Taylor
Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention | 1997
Joanne F. Dorgan; Frank Z. Stanczyk; Christopher Longcope; Hugh E. Stephenson; Lilly Chang; Rosetta Miller; Charlene Franz; Rom T. Falk; Lisa Kahle
Environmental Health Perspectives | 1997
Joanne F. Dorgan; Christopher Longcope; Hugh E. Stephenson; Roni T. Falk; Rosetta Miller; Charlene Franz; Lisa Kahle; William S. Campbell; Joseph A. Tangrea; Arthur Schatzkin
The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition | 1996
Joanne F. Dorgan; Marsha E. Reichman; Joseph T. Judd; Charles C. Brown; Christopher Longcope; Arthur Schatzkin; Michele R. Forman; William S. Campbell; Charlene Franz; Lisa Kahle; Philip R. Taylor
European Journal of Endocrinology | 1998
Sharon Alex; Lewis E. Braverman; Shih-Lieh Fang; Beth Norvell; Sonya Robinson; Charlene Franz; Christopher Longcope