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David R. Rubinow

Researcher at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Publications -  375
Citations -  25515

David R. Rubinow is an academic researcher from University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mood & Premenstrual dysphoric disorder. The author has an hindex of 82, co-authored 364 publications receiving 23457 citations. Previous affiliations of David R. Rubinow include National Institutes of Health & George Washington University.

Papers
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Current and lifetime psychiatric illness in women with Turner syndrome.

TL;DR: Women with Turner syndrome reported a higher rate of lifetime depression compared with rates observed in community-based studies but similar to those obtained from gynecologic clinic samples.
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Depression in women with spontaneous 46, XX primary ovarian insufficiency.

TL;DR: In some women the association between POI and depression suggests an overlapping pathophysiology rather than a causal relationship, and attention to the presence of depression in POI should become an important part of the care for these women.
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Sex-related differences in MAPKs activation in rat astrocytes: effects of estrogen on cell death.

TL;DR: The results suggest that the sex differences in unstimulated and estrogen-modulated activation of MAPKs may result in differential regulation of cell proliferation and death in astrocytes and possibly contribute to sexual dimorphisms in brain development.
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CSF substance P immunoreactivity in affective disorders.

TL;DR: CSF that was allowed to stand at room temperature for brief periods and then was refrozen contained elevated levels of the immunoreactive substance P, an observation that may account for a previous report of elevated CSF substance P immunoreactivity in psychiatric disorders.
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Menstrual cycle phase-related changes in appetite in patients with premenstrual syndrome and in control subjects.

TL;DR: There were significant increases in appetite in both groups, with a greater effect of menstrual cycle phase on appetite in patients, and the premenstrual increase in appetite was highly correlated with self-ratings of mood (particularly depression) in the patients only.