M
Marc B. Lande
Researcher at University of Rochester
Publications - 94
Citations - 3736
Marc B. Lande is an academic researcher from University of Rochester. The author has contributed to research in topics: Blood pressure & Neurocognitive. The author has an hindex of 31, co-authored 83 publications receiving 3148 citations. Previous affiliations of Marc B. Lande include Harvard University & Boston Children's Hospital.
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Journal ArticleDOI
The relationship between membrane fluidity and permeabilities to water, solutes, ammonia, and protons.
TL;DR: It is concluded that membrane fluidity determines permeability to most nonionic substances and that transmembrane proton flux occurs in a manner distinct from flux of other substances.
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Effects of Childhood Primary Hypertension on Carotid Intima Media Thickness: A Matched Controlled Study
TL;DR: Findings that hypertensive subjects had increased carotid intima media thickness compared with matched controls and that higher carotids intimaMedia thickness correlated with more severe hypertension by ambulatory blood pressure monitoring provide strong evidence that carotilite media thickness is increased in childhood primary hypertension, independent of the effects of obesity.
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Recurrent gain of function mutation in calcium channel CACNA1H causes early-onset hypertension with primary aldosteronism
Ute I. Scholl,Gabriel Stölting,Carol Nelson-Williams,Alfred A. Vichot,Murim Choi,Erin Loring,Manju L. Prasad,Gerald Goh,Tobias Carling,C. Christofer Juhlin,Ivo Quack,Lars Christian Rump,Anne Thiel,Marc B. Lande,Britney G Frazier,Majid Rasoulpour,David L Bowlin,Christine B. Sethna,Howard Trachtman,Christoph Fahlke,Richard P. Lifton +20 more
TL;DR: This mutation explains disease pathogenesis and provides new insight into mechanisms mediating aldosterone production and hypertension, and performs exome sequencing of 40 unrelated subjects with hypertension due to primary aldosteronism by age 10.
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Health-Related Quality of Life of Children with Mild to Moderate Chronic Kidney Disease
Arlene C. Gerson,Alicia Wentz,Allison G. Abraham,Susan R. Mendley,Stephen R. Hooper,Robert W. Butler,Debbie S. Gipson,Marc B. Lande,Shlomo Shinnar,Marva Moxey-Mims,Bradley A. Warady,Susan L. Furth +11 more
TL;DR: Children with mild to moderate CKD, in comparison with healthy children, reported poorer overall HRQoL and poorer physical, school, emotional, and social functioning.
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Elevated blood pressure and decreased cognitive function among school-age children and adolescents in the United States.
TL;DR: Children with elevation of systolic BP are at risk for central nervous system end-organ damage, as manifested by decreased digit span test scores, as indicated by linear regression.