scispace - formally typeset
R

R. Philip Eaton

Researcher at University of New Mexico

Publications -  71
Citations -  1880

R. Philip Eaton is an academic researcher from University of New Mexico. The author has contributed to research in topics: Insulin & Glucagon. The author has an hindex of 25, co-authored 71 publications receiving 1783 citations. Previous affiliations of R. Philip Eaton include University of Colorado Denver.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Reagentless Near-Infrared Determination of Glucose in Whole Blood Using Multivariate Calibration

TL;DR: It is suggested that blood chemistry differences were sufficiently different for the four subjects to require that a larger number of subjects be included in the calibration for adequate prediction abilities to be obtained from near-infrared spectra of blood from subjects not included inThe calibration.
Journal ArticleDOI

Post-Prandial Blood Glucose Determination by Quantitative Mid-Infrared Spectroscopy

TL;DR: Changes in spectrometer design or calibrations based on large numbers of subjects are expected to eliminate the presence of this bias and methods are demonstrated that significantly reduce the bias while retaining the sensitive outlier detection capabilities of the PLS methods.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dose Response to Insulin in Man: Differential Effects on Glucose and Ketone Body Regulation

TL;DR: This prospective study was undertaken to elucidate the relationship between progressive log increments in plasma free insulin concentration and the resultant changes in the concentrations of plasma glucose, potassium, ketones, and free fatty acids in man.
Journal ArticleDOI

The kinetics of peritoneal insulin absorption

TL;DR: The studies demonstrate that intraperitoneal administration of insulin results in absorption of insulin which is volume, concentration, and time-dependent, and the peritoneal space may be an appropriate site for insulin delivery through a transcutaneous catheter.
Journal ArticleDOI

Z−2 Microsatellite Allele Is Linked to Increased Expression of the Aldose Reductase Gene in Diabetic Nephropathy

TL;DR: The hypothesis that polymorphisms of the (A-C)n dinucleotide repeat sequence, located 2.1 kb upstream of the transcription start site, modulate ALDR1 gene expression and the risk for diabetic nephropathy is explored.