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Dive into the research topics where David M. Baldwin is active.

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Featured researches published by David M. Baldwin.


Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology | 1984

An evaluation of the copulatory, endocrinologic, and spermatotoxic effects of carbon disulfide in the rat☆

Harold Zenick; Karen Blackburn; Esther Hope; David M. Baldwin

The present study was undertaken to evaluate the endocrinologic and spermatogenic effects of carbon disulfide (CS2) exposure in the rat. Adult, male rats were exposed to either 600 ppm CS2 or filtered air for 6 hr/day for 5 days/week for 10 weeks. One week prior to exposure and then at Weeks 1, 4, 7, and 10, males were placed with ovariectomized, hormonally primed females, and copulatory behaviors were scored. Fifteen minutes postcopulation, the female was killed and the ejaculate was recovered from the excised uterine tract along with the semen plug. Sperm counts, sperm motility, and morphology were determined. A blood sample was obtained for analyses of testosterone, follicle-stimulating (FSH), and luteinizing hormone (LH). At the end of the 10th week, five animals in each group were challenged with either human chorionic gonadotropin (HCG, 50 IU/animal, iv) or gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH, 100 ng/animal, iv), and the testosterone or gonadotropin responses were monitored over time. Animals were subsequently killed with one epididymis and testis processed for histology and a sperm count determined from the other epididymis. Analysis revealed that CS2 exposure produced significant alterations in copulatory behavior and a decrease in ejaculated sperm counts by the fourth and seventh weeks of exposure, respectively. No endocrinologic alterations were observed. Moreover, caudal epididymal sperm counts were not depressed and the testes appeared histologically normal. These data suggest that CS2 does not exert a direct effect on the testes, but rather may interfere with the processes regulating sperm transport and ejaculation.


Endocrinology | 1987

The Effects of Gonadotropin-Releasing Hormone and Estradiol on Luteinizing Hormone Biosynthesis in Cultured Rat Anterior Pituitary Cells*

Jacques W. Ramey; Robert F. Highsmith; W. W. Wilfinger; David M. Baldwin


Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology | 1984

Teratogenicity of nitrofen (2,4-dichloro-4′-nitrodiphenyl ether) and its effects on thyroid function in the rat

Jeanne M. Manson; Thomas L. Brown; David M. Baldwin


Biology of Reproduction | 1974

Plasma Levels of Progesterone, Cortisol, and Corticosterone in the Pregnant Rabbit

David M. Baldwin; George H. Stabenfeldt


Biology of Reproduction | 1991

Differential actions of corticosterone on luteinizing hormone and follicle-stimulating hormone biosynthesis and release in cultured rat anterior pituitary cells: interactions with estradiol.

David M. Baldwin; Prem S. Srivastava; Lynne A. Krummen


Endocrinology | 1988

Regulation of Luteinizing Hormone Subunit Biosynthesis in Cultured Male Anterior Pituitary Cells: Effects of Gonadotropin-Releasing Hormone and Testosterone*

Lynne A. Krummen; David M. Baldwin


Biology of Reproduction | 1986

An in vitro study of LH release, synthesis and heterogeneity in pituitaries from proestrous and short-term ovariectomized rats.

David M. Baldwin; Robert F. Highsmith; Jacques W. Ramey; Lynne A. Krummen


Biology of Reproduction | 1983

Characterization of the luteinizing hormone response to continuous infusions of gonadotropin releasing hormone using perifused pituitaries from intact, ovariectomized and steroid-treated rats.

David M. Baldwin; Jacques W. Ramey; William W. Wilfinger


Biology of Reproduction | 1981

Release of LH and FSH by Anterior Pituitary Cell Suspensions from Female Rats During the Estrous Cycle and from Estrogen-Treated Ovariectomized Rats

David M. Baldwin; Thomas R. Downs


Endocrinology | 1987

Effects of a low calcium environment on luteinizing hormone biosynthesis in cultured rat anterior pituitary cells.

Jacques W. Ramey; Lynne A. Krummen; W. W. Wilfinger; Robert F. Highsmith; David M. Baldwin

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Robert F. Highsmith

University of Cincinnati Academic Health Center

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Bill L. Lasley

University of California

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David B. Morehead

Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center

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Esther Hope

University of Cincinnati

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Harold Papkoff

University of California

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Harold Zenick

University of Cincinnati

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