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B. Little

Researcher at Case Western Reserve University

Publications -  32
Citations -  523

B. Little is an academic researcher from Case Western Reserve University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Ovariectomized rat & Hypothalamus. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 32 publications receiving 510 citations. Previous affiliations of B. Little include Parke-Davis.

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Study of ketamine as an obstetric anesthetic agent.

TL;DR: Side effects included a 30 to 40 per cent increase in systolic and diastolic blood pressure, an increase in pulse and respiration, salivation, and nausea, and vivid but usually pleasant dreams.
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Progesterone Production Rates During the Third Trimester of Pregnancy in Normal Women, Diabetic Women, and Women with Abnormal Glucose Tolerance1

TL;DR: The metabolic clearance rate of progesterone has been studied by single injection (MCRR) and by continuous infusion methods in the third trimester of pregnancy in 22 normal women and in 10 women with abnormal intravenous glucose tolerance (GTT).
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The metabolic clearance rate, head and brain extractions, and brain distribution and metabolism of progesterone in the anesthetized, female monkey (Macaca Mulatta)

TL;DR: The brain distribution and metabolism of progesterone were studied in female, rhesus monkeys and [3H]Estradiol infused into one monkey had its highest concentration in the anterior pituitary which was 20 times higher than in the carotid arterial blood.
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In vivo aspects of progesterone distribution and metabolism

TL;DR: Liver, brain, and uterine clearances, extractions, and conversions of progesterone to these metabolites have been studied in various species under apparent steady-state conditions, including man, monkey, sheep, rat, and guinea pig.
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Induction of Uteroglobin in Rabbits by Progestogens, Estradiol-17β and ACTH

TL;DR: Preliminary evidence is presented which indicates that the rabbit adrenal might be a signficant source of progesterone and the uterus responded with a typical progestational response in ACTH treated animals.