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Lisa A. Kolp

Researcher at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

Publications -  40
Citations -  1194

Lisa A. Kolp is an academic researcher from Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. The author has contributed to research in topics: Luteinizing hormone & Gonadotropin. The author has an hindex of 18, co-authored 40 publications receiving 1154 citations. Previous affiliations of Lisa A. Kolp include University of Virginia & Johns Hopkins University.

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Operating characteristics of the male hypothalamo-pituitary-gonadal axis: pulsatile release of testosterone and follicle-stimulating hormone and their temporal coupling with luteinizing hormone.

TL;DR: Significant pulsatile as well as circadian (24-h) patterns of testosterone and FSH release in normal men are identified and stepwise autoregressive fitting was employed to eliminate high intrinsic autocorrelations within the testosterone and LH time series.
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Complications of laparoscopy—operative and diagnostic

TL;DR: Operative laparoscopy is efficacious for a variety of gynecologic surgical procedures, including lysis of adhesions, tubal surgery, ovarian surgery, uterine surgery, or destruction of endometriosis.
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Physiological Profiles of Episodic Progesterone Release During the Midluteal Phase of the Human Menstrual Cycle: Analysis of Circadian and Ultradian Rhythms, Discrete Pulse Properties, and Correlations With Simultaneous Luteinizing Hormone Release*

TL;DR: Progesterone release occurs in a periodic (circadian and ultradian) fashion as well as in a discrete (episodic or pulsatile) mode and both positive and negative feedback relationships operate to coordinate LH and progesterone secretion in the midluteal phase of the human menstrual cycle.
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Endoscopic versus laparotomy management of endometriomas

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compared the surgical management and follow-up of patients with endometriomas managed by endoscopic surgery versus laparotomy using a retrospective case control format.
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Mechanisms subserving the trophic actions of insulin on ovarian cells. In vitro studies using swine granulosa cells

TL;DR: Investigations indicate that insulin acts on ovarian cells selectively to stimulate pregnenolone (but not estrogen) biosynthesis, and that specific trophic actions of insulin or insulinlike growth factors are likely to significantly regulate the differentiated function of the Graafian follicle in vivo.