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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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Journal Article

Survival and cure of leukemic mice after circadian optimization of treatment with cyclophosphamide and 1-beta-D-arabinofuranosylcytosine.

TL;DR: With the use of a chronobiological (sinusoidal) approach, in comparison with one or two conventional treatment schedules, it was possible to demonstrate an overall lower toxicity as monitored by death or weight loss.
Journal ArticleDOI

Chronoastrobiology: Proposal, nine conferences, heliogeomagnetics, transyears, near-weeks, near-decades, phylogenetic and ontogenetic memories

TL;DR: The new study of time structures in biology with regard to influences from cosmo- helio- and geomagnetic rhythms chronoastrobiology is dubbed because it is emerging that rhythmic events generated from within the sun itself, as a large turbulent magnet in its own right, can have direct effects upon life on earth.
Book ChapterDOI

Chronobiologic Blood Pressure Assessment from Womb to Tomb

TL;DR: The differences between systolic (S) and diastolic (D) BP have long been recognized and utilized, but it is often not realized that the DBP at a given time can be higher than the SBP measured in the same person at another time on the same day.
Journal ArticleDOI

Timing of single daily meal influences relations among human circadian rhythms in urinary cyclic AMP and hemic glucagon, insulin and iron.

TL;DR: Relations among circadian rhythms in serum iron, glucagon and insulin and urinary cyclic AMP excretion differ drastically when diurnally active, nocturnally resting human adults consume all daily food for one week as breakfast only and for another week as dinner only.
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Estrogen and progesterone receptors in human breast cancer. Correlation with histologic subtype and degree of differentiation.

TL;DR: Microscopic review of 490 consecutive human breast biopsy and mastectomy specimens were correlated with estrogen and progesterone receptor content of the tissue, by subtype and degree of differentiation, to find patients with mucinous carcinoma and medullary carcinoma had the lowest tissue levels of estrogen and PROGesterone receptors.