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Rebecca Hoban

Researcher at United States Department of Veterans Affairs

Publications -  5
Citations -  552

Rebecca Hoban is an academic researcher from United States Department of Veterans Affairs. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Biology. The author has an hindex of 2, co-authored 2 publications receiving 502 citations. Previous affiliations of Rebecca Hoban include University of California, San Diego.

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Assessment of Response to Lithium Maintenance Treatment in Bipolar Disorder: A Consortium on Lithium Genetics (ConLiGen) Report

Mirko Manchia, +104 more
TL;DR: The key phenotypic measures of the “Retrospective Criteria of Long-Term Treatment Response in Research Subjects with Bipolar Disorder” scale currently used in the Consortium on lithium Genetics (ConLiGen) study are reported.
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The International Consortium on Lithium Genetics (ConLiGen): an initiative by the NIMH and IGSLI to study the genetic basis of response to lithium treatment.

TL;DR: An international effort to elucidate the genetic underpinnings of lithium response in bipolar disorder is presented, currently comprising more than 1,200 patients characterized for response to lithium treatment.
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Updating Clinical Practices to Promote and Protect Human Milk and Breastfeeding in a COVID-19 Era

TL;DR: These measures will allow for a new, adapted framework of practice that acknowledges the current COVID-19 paradigm and maintains the emphasis on the need to protect and support breastfeeding and the use of human milk.
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Investigating the phenotypic and genetic associations between personality traits and suicidal behavior across major mental health diagnoses

Janos Kalman, +142 more
TL;DR: This paper examined phenotype-and genotype-level associations between the Big Five personality traits and suicidal ideation and attempt in major depressive, bipolar and schizoaffective disorder, and schizophrenia patients using fixed-and random-effects inverse variance-weighted meta-analyses.
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Metabolic acidosis during continuous glucagon therapy for neonatal hypoglycemia.

TL;DR: In addition to thrombocytopenia, metabolic acidosis of unclear etiology appears to be very common with glucagon infusions for neonatal hypoglycemia, especially in lower birth weight infants or those born to mothers without diabetes.