G
Gladys W. Strain
Researcher at Cornell University
Publications - 112
Citations - 6118
Gladys W. Strain is an academic researcher from Cornell University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Weight loss & Duodenal switch. The author has an hindex of 41, co-authored 111 publications receiving 5601 citations. Previous affiliations of Gladys W. Strain include Yeshiva University & Beth Israel Medical Center.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Position of the American Dietetic Association: weight management.
TL;DR: Any changes in dietary intake and exercise patterns which decrease caloric intake below energy expenditure will result in weight loss, but it is the responsibility of the dietitian to make sure the changes recommended are directed toward improved physiological and psychological health.
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Twenty-Four-Hour Mean Plasma Testosterone Concentration Declines with Age in Normal Premenopausal Women
TL;DR: The 24-h mean plasma concentration of total testosterone (T) was measured in 33 healthy, regularly cycling, nonobese women between 21 and 51 yr of age and found that the concentration showed a steep decline with age; the regression equation was T (nanomoles per L) = 37.8 x age-1.12.
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Plasma free and non-sex-hormone-binding-globulin-bound testosterone are decreased in obese men in proportion to their degree of obesity.
Barnett Zumoff,Gladys W. Strain,Lorraine K. Miller,William Rosner,Ruby T. Senie,David S. Seres,Robert S. Rosenfeld +6 more
TL;DR: Free T and non-SHBG-bound T are decreased in obese men in proportion to the degree of obesity, just as is the case for total T.
Journal ArticleDOI
Psychopathology before surgery in the Longitudinal Assessment of Bariatric Surgery-3 (LABS-3) Psychosocial Study
James E. Mitchell,Faith Selzer,Melissa A. Kalarchian,Michael J. Devlin,Gladys W. Strain,Katherine A. Elder,Marsha D. Marcus,Steve Wonderlich,Nicholas J. Christian,Susan Z. Yanovski +9 more
TL;DR: The current and lifetime rates of psychopathology are high in bariatric surgery candidates, and the Lifetime rates of affective disorder and alcohol use disorders are particularly prominent.
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Sex differences in the twenty-four-hour mean plasma concentrations of dehydroisoandrosterone (DHA) and dehydroisoandrosterone sulfate (DHAS) and the DHA to DHAS ratio in normal adults.
TL;DR: The two steroids showed a clear-cut linear inverse correlation between concentration and age in both sexes, and menopause was "nonevent" in the age progression for both steroids in the women.