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Christina Wang

Researcher at Los Angeles Biomedical Research Institute

Publications -  450
Citations -  30621

Christina Wang is an academic researcher from Los Angeles Biomedical Research Institute. The author has contributed to research in topics: Testosterone (patch) & Sperm. The author has an hindex of 88, co-authored 422 publications receiving 27941 citations. Previous affiliations of Christina Wang include Queen Mary University of London & Cedars-Sinai Medical Center.

Papers
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Cross-sectional study of semen parameters in a large group of normal Chinese men.

TL;DR: Sperm concentration and the total sperm count were positively correlated with testicular volume, the length of abstinence, the % of sperm with an oval head, and the zona-free hamster egg penetration test, but were negatively correlated with serum FSH.
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Ethnic Differences in Testicular Structure and Spermatogenic Potential May Predispose Testes of Asian Men to a Heightened Sensitivity to Steroidal Contraceptives

TL;DR: Small testes coupled with reduced Sertoli cell number and function and reduced daily sperm production could predispose Asian men to have a heightened negative response of testes to steroidal contraceptives, as compared to Caucasian men.
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Use of low-dosage oral cyproterone acetate as a male contraceptive

TL;DR: The findings suggest that although low dosage CPA was able to induce changes in seminal analyses, azoospermia was present in only one out of 15 subjects exposed to the drug and renders CPA unsuitable as a single entity agent for long-term male contraception.
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Hormonal approaches to male contraception.

TL;DR: Male hormonal contraception is efficacious, reversible and well tolerated for the target population of younger men in stable relationships and translation to widespread use in the developed world will need the manufacturing and marketing skills of the pharmaceutical industry.
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Carcinoma of the nasopharynx. Factors influencing results of therapy.

Jack E. Meyer, +1 more
- 01 Aug 1971 - 
TL;DR: Six factors affecting the survival of 170 patients with nasopharyngeal carcinoma are discussed: extent of the primary lesion, status of cervical lymph node metastases, histological classification, age, sex, and effect of recurrence after initial treatment.