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Abigail E. Sadler
Researcher at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
Publications - 5
Citations - 690
Abigail E. Sadler is an academic researcher from Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Dichotic listening & Adrenarche. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 5 publications receiving 685 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Quinolinic acid in cerebrospinal fluid and serum in HIV-1 infection: relationship to clinical and neurological status.
Melvyn P. Heyes,Bruce J. Brew,Alex Martin,Richard W. Price,Andres M. Salazar,John J. Sidtis,J. A. Yergey,M. Maral Mouradian,Abigail E. Sadler,John J. Keilp,David R. Rubinow,Sanford P. Markey +11 more
TL;DR: Analysis of the relationship between levels of quinolinic acid in the CSF and serum and integrity of the blood‐brain barrier, as measured by theCSF: serum albumin ratio, it appears that CSF levels are derived predominantly from intracerebral sources and perhaps from the serum.
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Cerebrospinal fluid beta 2-microglobulin in patients with AIDS dementia complex: an expanded series including response to zidovudine treatment.
Bruce J. Brew,Ravi B. Bhalla,Morris Paul,John J. Sidtis,John J. Sidtis,John J. Keilp,Abigail E. Sadler,Humilidad F. Gallardo,Justin C. McArthur,Morton K. Schwartz,Richard W. Price,Richard W. Price +11 more
TL;DR: CSF (β2M) may be a valuable marker of ADC severity and response to antiviral therapy and its application in patients undergoing ADC treatment is still under investigation.
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Differential effects of congenital versus acquired unilateral brain injury on dichotic listening performance: Evidence for sparing and asymmetric crowding
TL;DR: The results indicate that although congenital damage produces a "lesion effect" in dichotic listening similar to that after damage acquired in adulthood, overall function is relatively spared and the present results are consistent with an asymmetric form of crowding during reorganization after congenital unilateral brain damage.
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The effects of precocious adrenarche on cognition and hemispheric specialization.
TL;DR: The spatial abilities of females with a history of PA, who had reached gonarche (were fully pubertal), were inferior to those of females tested in the midst of PA and to population controls, resulting in a relative spatial deficit among females in general.
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Double disconnection effects resulting from infiltrating tumors.
TL;DR: It is suggested that the so-called paradoxical loss is better referred to as callosal extinction, because two patients with infiltrating tumors which involved the corpus callosum demonstrated that effect, but also demonstrated right ear extinction on a complex-pitch discrimination test that required right hemisphere processing.