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Gabriele R. Lubach

Researcher at University of Wisconsin-Madison

Publications -  73
Citations -  3192

Gabriele R. Lubach is an academic researcher from University of Wisconsin-Madison. The author has contributed to research in topics: Pregnancy & Iron deficiency. The author has an hindex of 29, co-authored 68 publications receiving 2895 citations. Previous affiliations of Gabriele R. Lubach include Iowa State University.

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Prenatal stress alters bacterial colonization of the gut in infant monkeys.

TL;DR: Moderate disturbance during pregnancy was sufficient to alter the intestinal microflora in the newborn infant, which could result in enhanced susceptibility to infection and suggest a mechanism for some effects of maternal pregnancy conditions on infant health.
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Growth and Development Following Prenatal Stress Exposure in Primates: An Examination of Ontogenetic Vulnerability

TL;DR: Clarifying the period of greatest vulnerability to prenatal stress moves toward elucidating the underlying mechanism for prenatal stress effects and may lead to more successful intervention and/or prevention.
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Maternal Influenza Infection During Pregnancy Impacts Postnatal Brain Development in the Rhesus Monkey

TL;DR: Influenza infection during pregnancy affects neural development in the monkey, reducing gray matter throughout most of the cortex and decreasing white matter in parietal cortex and thus might increase the likelihood of later behavioral pathology.
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A diffusion tensor MRI atlas of the postmortem rhesus macaque brain

TL;DR: This atlas incorporates many useful features from previous work, including anatomic label nomenclature and ontology, data orientation, and stereotaxic reference frame, and further extends prior analyses with the inclusion of high-resolution multi-contrast image data.
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Endocrine activation mimics the adverse effects of prenatal stress on the neuromotor development of the infant primate.

TL;DR: Findings indicate that a delimited period of endocrine activation during pregnancy can have an adverse effect on infant neurobehavioral development, like that of prenatal stress.