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J. A. H. Wass

Researcher at St Bartholomew's Hospital

Publications -  114
Citations -  5434

J. A. H. Wass is an academic researcher from St Bartholomew's Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Acromegaly & Somatostatin. The author has an hindex of 40, co-authored 114 publications receiving 5327 citations.

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Molecular forms of somatostatin in normal subjects and in patients with pancreatic somatostatinoma.

TL;DR: Two patients with somatostatin‐secreting pancreatic tumours are described, one presenting with hypoglycaemia due to hyperinsulinism, and the other with Cushing's syndrome due to ectopic ACTH production, and when plasma from these patients was subjected to gel chromatography under conditions designed to prevent som atostatin binding to larger proteins, a peak of monomeric immunoreactive somatstatin was observed as well as several large molecular weight forms.
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Reversible Respiratory Muscle Weakness in Hyperthyroidism

TL;DR: It is indicated that respiratory muscle weakness occurs in hyperthyroidism and that such weakness is reversible with medical treatment, and significant improvement occurred in quadriceps muscle strength, vital capacity, and global respiratory muscle strength.
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Proteolytic modification of insulin-like growth factor-binding proteins: comparison of conditioned media from human cell lines, circulating proteases and characterized enzymes.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the serum of pregnant women, post-operative patients and patients with cancer contain circulating proteases which cause fragmentation of IGFBP-3 but have little effect on IGF BP-1.
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Response of circulating somatostatin, insulin, gastrin and gip, to intraduodenal infusion of nutrients in normal man

TL;DR: It is postulated that somatostatin may be an enterogastrone–a circulating hormone released by intraduodenal fat which inhibits gastric acid secretion which is evidence against the hypothesis that circulating GIP acts as an enterogsastrone.
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Lymphocytic hypophysitis: unusual features of a rare disorder

TL;DR: The experience of this disorder was reviewed to see whether these features were universal amongst patients, and whether they were often associated with pregnancy.