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Featured researches published by Fred I. Chasalow.


Journal of Adolescent Health Care | 1990

Blunted growth hormone responses to clonidine in adolescent girls with early anorexia nervosa: Evidence for an early hypothalamic defect

Michael P. Nussbaum; Sandra L. Blethen; Fred I. Chasalow; Marc S. Jacobson; I. Ronald Shenker; Joseph Feldman

We studied growth hormone (GH) levels in 14 adolescents with anorexia nervosa (AN), 12-20 years of age. All had amenorrhea and the duration of symptoms ranged from 2-24 months. There was no difference in unstimulated GH between the girls with AN and endocrinologically normal girls. However, the GH response to the alpha-adrenergic agent clonidine was blunted (less than 10 ng/ml) in 11 of 14 girls with AN. Our results of a normal basal GH level and blunted response to stimulation is in contrast to some reports of high basal GH levels and an exaggerated response to pituitary stimulation although it agrees with other studies. Our patient population was younger and at an earlier stage of the disease (12 with symptoms for less than 1 year) than the AN patients previously reported to have elevated GH secretion. In view of studies that report an elevated GH response to growth hormone releasing factor, our results suggest that the AN patients abnormalities in GH secretion may result from an abnormal hypothalamic response to adrenergic stimuli. This hypothalamic abnormality might also contribute to the growth failure seen in adolescent girls with AN.


Steroids | 1989

Serum levels of dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate as determined by commercial kits and reagents

Fred I. Chasalow; Sandra L. Blethen; Dawn Duckett; Scott Zeitlin; Jill Greenfield

We measured serum dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate (DHEA-S) levels by nine different radioimmunoassay (RIA) methods. Although each method was adequate for determining the amount of authentic DHEA-S, there were marked differences observed between the methods when serum samples were tested. Further, the pattern of these differences varied in different clinical situations. We suggest that the differences in the apparent DHEA-S content resulted from the presence of structurally related compounds which differ in their cross-reactivity in the different RIAs. One of these cross-reacting materials may be a functional androgen.


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 1990

Characterization of Digoxin‐Like Materials in Human Cord Serum

Fred I. Chasalow; Sandra L. Blethen

Human cord serum contains substantial amounts of materials that cross-react in radioimmunoassays for digoxin. The average content of digoxin-like immunoreactivity in mixed cord serum is 0.3 +/- 0.05 ngE/ml compared to less than 0.05 ngE/ml in serum from normal adults. After solvent extraction, the major digoxin-like materials present in cord serum coelute on Sephadex LH-20 column with the steroid sulfate fraction. The steroid sulfates are digoxin-like materials because they cross-react in the digoxin RIA. If the amount of dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate, 16 alpha-hydroxydehydroepiandrosterone sulfate, and 15 beta-hydroxydehydroepiandrosterone sulfate present in cord serum and the amount of digoxin-like material present in the same serum are considered, then up to 90% of the digoxin-like materials present can be accounted for on the basis of the steroid sulfates present. However, although steroid sulfates contribute to the digoxin immunoreactivity in both serum and breast cyst fluid, digoxin-like materials are present in breast cyst fluid that are not present in cord serum.


Steroids | 1988

Dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate (DHEA-S) and DHEA-S-like compounds in fibrocystic disease of the breast

Fred I. Chasalow; Sandra L. Blethen; H. Leon Bradlow

We assayed Type 1 (high K+) and Type 2 (high Na+) human breast cyst fluids for DHEA-S. When an antibody specific for the 3-sulfoconjugate end of DHEA-S was used, Type 1 cyst fluids (n = 18) showed a content of 114 +/- 68 micrograms/mL (mean +/- sigma) and Type 2 cyst fluids (n = 14) of 35 +/- 17 micrograms/mL (P less than 0.01). Using an antibody specific for the D-ring, the results were 151 +/- 91 micrograms/mL and 51 +/- 32 micrograms/mL, respectively (P less than 0.01). The apparent concentrations of DHEA-S were statistically different, even though both assays gave equal results in serum from normal adults. The presence of other compounds in individual cyst fluid samples was examined by extraction and chromatography. DHEA-S immunoreactivity was found in both early and late eluting fractions in Type 1 cyst fluids and in late eluting fractions from Type 2 cyst fluids. Only the late eluting fraction from Type 2 fluids had approximately equal immunoreactivity with both antibodies. In addition to authentic DHEA-S, breast cyst fluids contain other materials that react with DHEA-S antibodies. Radioimmunoassays for DHEA-S in cyst fluid must be specifically validated because of the presence of these compounds.


Steroids | 1988

Sex hormone-binding globulin and thyroxine-binding globulin levels in premature thelarche

Gary B. Wenick; Fred I. Chasalow; Sandra L. Blethen

Premature thelarche is defined as the isolated development of breast tissue in girls less than 8 years of age. Although breast development is an estrogen-dependent process, these girls do not have elevated serum estrogen levels, and the hormonal basis for their condition is unclear. We studied the levels of two estrogen-dependent transport proteins, sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG) and thyroxine-binding globulin (TBG), in order to determine if there was evidence for a more subtle estrogen effect in girls with premature thelarche. SHBG levels in girls with premature thelarche were not significantly different from those of prepubertal girls of the same ages and were significantly lower than those in girls undergoing pubertal development at the appropriate age (P less than 0.05) and in normal women (P less than 0.001). There was no statistically significant difference in TBG levels between the girls with premature thelarche and prepubertal controls. There was also no significant difference in TBG levels between prepubertal girls and girls in early puberty. In contrast, women had TBG levels that were significantly lower than those in all girls studied. We conclude that the estrogen exposure (whether endogenous or exogenous) of girls with premature thelarche is less than that of girls in early true puberty and similar to that of other prepubertal girls. Further, changes in serum TBG are not as sensitive an indicator of estrogen effect as is breast development or changes in SHBG. This study also suggests that large amounts of exogenous estrogens are not an element in the development of premature thelarche.


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 1990

Criteria for Classifying Breast Cyst Fluids

Alberto Angeli; H. Leon Bradlow; Carol Bodian; Fred I. Chasalow; Luigi Dogliotti; Darrow E. Haagensen


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 1990

Biochemical Classification of Patients with Gross Cystic Breast Disease

H. Leon Bradlow; Martin Fleisher; Charles N. Breed; Fred I. Chasalow


American Journal of Medical Genetics | 1987

Steroid metabolic disturbances in Prader-Willi syndrome.

Fred I. Chasalow; Sandra L. Blethen; Judith G. Tobash; Darlene Myles; Merlin G. Butler; John M. Opitz; James F. Reynolds; David H. Ledbetter


Hormone Research in Paediatrics | 1993

Gonadotropin-Associated Psychosis in Perimenstrual Behavior Disorder

Mireille Constant; Cyril A.L. Abrams; Fred I. Chasalow


Archive | 1989

Treatment of Prader-Willi syndrome

Leon Bradlow; Fred I. Chasalow

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Sandra L. Blethen

Long Island Jewish Medical Center

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Carol Bodian

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Cyril A.L. Abrams

Long Island Jewish Medical Center

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Darlene Myles

Long Island Jewish Medical Center

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Dawn Duckett

Long Island Jewish Medical Center

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