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Erhard Haus

Researcher at University of Minnesota

Publications -  138
Citations -  6794

Erhard Haus is an academic researcher from University of Minnesota. The author has contributed to research in topics: Circadian rhythm & Chronobiology. The author has an hindex of 43, co-authored 138 publications receiving 6410 citations. Previous affiliations of Erhard Haus include Regions Hospital & HealthPartners.

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24 Hour Urinary Dehydroepiandosterone Sulfate in Unipolar Depression Treated with Cognitive and/or Pharmacotherapy

TL;DR: Nonpharmacologic interventions may facilitate recovery from depression independent of HPA modification, namely, DHEA-S, which positively covaried with rating scales improvement following pharmacotherapy only, despite the similar efficacy of cognitive behavioral therapy.
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Circadian characteristics of urinary melatonin from clinically healthy young women at different civilization disease risks.

TL;DR: A prominent circadian rhythm characterizes urinary melatonin in both populations, peaking in the middle of the night, and the American women exhibit a larger circadian rhythm-adjusted mean (mesor) than do the Japanese women.
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Rheumatoid arthritis: circadian rhythms in disease activity, signs and symptoms, and rationale for chronotherapy with corticosteroids and other medications.

TL;DR: The circadian pattern of various cytokines and hormones in RA disease activity suggests a new treatment paradigm (i.e., chronotherapy-timing medications to 24-hour rhythms in disease pathophysiology) to improve desired outcomes.
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Evidence for an Ontogenetic Basis for Circadian Coordination of Cancer Cell Proliferation

TL;DR: The possibility that the circadian time structure of DNA synthesis and/or mitosis is determined not by whether a cell is benign or malignant but rather by the tissue of origin of that cell, i.e., its ontogeny, is raised.
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Risk of obesity in male shift workers: A chronophysiological approach

TL;DR: Major effects are likely to relate to a sedentary lifestyle (lack of regular physical or sport activities) as well as, presumably, to a nocturnal nibbling of carbohydrates, which mimics the night eating syndrome.