David R. Pieper
Wayne State University
7 Papers
37 Citations
David R. Pieper is an academic researcher from Wayne State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Adrenergic antagonist & Prolactin. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 6 publications.
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Papers
The effects of serotonergic and adrenergic receptor antagonists on prolactin release in the monkey
TL;DR: It appears that the time course and extent of prolactin release differs among neural antagonists even within the same biogenic amine system.
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Comparison of Resident Self-Evaluation to Standardized Patient Evaluators in a Multi-Institutional Objective Structured Clinical Examination: Objectively Measuring Residents' Communication and Counseling Skills.
Benjamin Diaczok,Simone Brennan,Diane Levine,Raymond Hilu,Neelimi Thati,James Kruer,Samira Ahsan,Patricia McNally,David R. Pieper +8 more
TL;DR: Targeted OSCEs provide an objective format to evaluate residents in challenging clinical scenarios and need to develop interventions and curricula to improve resident's self-evaluation skills and in particular address lower self- evaluation by female trainees.
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Influence of adrenergic antagonists and apomorphine on prolactin release induced by serotonergic antagonists in the monkey.
TL;DR: The influence of adrenergic receptor blockers on the prolactin releasing effect of methysergide and cyproheptadine was examined in sexually mature female monkeys under ketamine anesthesia and propranolol, a β-adrenergic blocker, at a dose of 1 mg/kg did not alter the prolactor releasing action.
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Influence of blinding, olfactory bulbectomy and pinealectomy on plasma prolactin levels in the neonatally androgenized female rat.
TL;DR: The evidence indicated that the elevated morning PRL levels observed in NA rats was not due to an altered function of the pineal gland and that BLD + ANOS blunted the action of exogenous estrogen on uterine weight.
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Influence of serotonergic and adrenergic antagonists on TRH-induced prolactin release in the monkey.
TL;DR: Both β and α adrenergic antagonist gave a similar potentiation of the TRH-induced prolactin response but only phenoxybenzamine plus TRH was statistically different (P).
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