J
Jennifer L. Eaton
Researcher at Duke University
Publications - 43
Citations - 684
Jennifer L. Eaton is an academic researcher from Duke University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Live birth. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 31 publications receiving 543 citations. Previous affiliations of Jennifer L. Eaton include Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center & Northwestern University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Pregnancy outcomes decline with increasing body mass index: analysis of 239,127 fresh autologous in vitro fertilization cycles from the 2008–2010 Society for Assisted Reproductive Technology registry
Meredith P. Provost,Kelly S. Acharya,Chaitanya R. Acharya,Jason S. Yeh,Ryan G. Steward,Jennifer L. Eaton,James M. Goldfarb,Suheil J. Muasher +7 more
TL;DR: Success rates in fresh autologous cycles, including those done for specifically PCOS or male-factor infertility, are highest in those with low and normal BMIs and there is a progressive and statistically significant worsening of outcomes in groups with higher BMIs.
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Pregnancy outcomes decline with increasing recipient body mass index: an analysis of 22,317 fresh donor/recipient cycles from the 2008–2010 Society for Assisted Reproductive Technology Clinic Outcome Reporting System registry
Meredith P. Provost,Kelly S. Acharya,Chaitanya R. Acharya,Jason S. Yeh,Ryan G. Steward,Jennifer L. Eaton,James M. Goldfarb,Suheil J. Muasher +7 more
TL;DR: Success rates in recipient cycles are highest in those with low and normal BMI, but progressively worsened as BMI increased, and there is a progressive and statistically significant worsening of outcomes in groups with higher BMI with respect to clinical pregnancy and live birth rate.
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Embryo culture media and neonatal birthweight following IVF
Jennifer L. Eaton,Ellice Lieberman,Ellice Lieberman,C. Stearns,M. Chinchilla,Catherine Racowsky,Catherine Racowsky +6 more
TL;DR: This retrospective study demonstrated no significant association between embryo culture medium and birthweight following IVF, although the careful selection of patients minimized the influence of potential confounders.
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Amniocytes can serve a dual function as a source of iPS cells and feeder layers
Raymond M. Anchan,Philipp Quaas,Behzad Gerami-Naini,Hrishikesh Bartake,Adam Griffin,Yilan Zhou,Daniel S. Day,Jennifer L. Eaton,Liji L. George,Catherine Naber,Annick Turbe-Doan,Peter J. Park,Peter J. Park,Mark D. Hornstein,Richard L. Maas +14 more
TL;DR: Human amniocytes provide an efficient source of autologous iPS cells and, as feeder cells, can also maintain iPS and ES cell pluripotency without the safety concerns associated with xenoculture.
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Increased AKT or MEK1/2 activity influences progesterone receptor levels and localization in endometriosis
TL;DR: Inhibition of AKT or MEK1/2 increased total and nuclear PR protein in OSIS and trends toward decreased volumes of sc grafted endometriosis tissues were demonstrated with MK-2206 and progesterone.