R
Richard H. Sandler
Researcher at Nemours Foundation
Publications - 48
Citations - 2186
Richard H. Sandler is an academic researcher from Nemours Foundation. The author has contributed to research in topics: Imaging phantom & Signal. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 48 publications receiving 2036 citations. Previous affiliations of Richard H. Sandler include Rush Medical College & Boston Children's Hospital.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Gastrointestinal Microflora Studies in Late-Onset Autism
Sydney M. Finegold,Sydney M. Finegold,Denise Molitoris,Yuli Song,Chengxu Liu,Marja Liisa Vaisanen,Ellen R. Bolte,Maureen McTeague,Richard H. Sandler,Hannah M. Wexler,Hannah M. Wexler,Elizabeth M. Marlowe,Elizabeth M. Marlowe,Matthew D. Collins,Paul A. Lawson,Paula Summanen,Mehmet Baysallar,Thomas J. Tomzynski,Erik K. Read,Eric A. Johnson,Rial D. Rolfe,Palwasha Nasir,Haroun N. Shah,David A. Haake,David A. Haake,Patricia Manning,Ajay Kaul +26 more
TL;DR: Significant alterations in the upper and lower intestinal flora of children with late-onset autism are demonstrated and may provide insights into the nature of this disorder.
Journal ArticleDOI
Short-term benefit from oral vancomycin treatment of regressive-onset autism.
Richard H. Sandler,Sydney M. Finegold,Ellen R. Bolte,Cathleen P. Buchanan,Anne P. Maxwell,Marja-Liisa Väisänen,Michael N. Nelson,Hannah M. Wexler +7 more
TL;DR: It is speculated that, in a subgroup of children, disruption of indigenous gut flora might promote colonization by one or more neurotoxin-producing bacteria, contributing, at least in part, to their autistic symptomatology.
Patent
Acoustic detection of vascular conditions
TL;DR: In this paper, a system and method of detecting a vascular condition within a body receives vibrations emitted in response to blood flowing through a vascular structure within the body and converts the received vibrations into vibration information.
PatentDOI
Acoustic detection of respiratory conditions
TL;DR: In this paper, sound waves or vibrations that have interacted with a respiratory condition within a patient and which impinge on the chest wall of the patient are processed using percussive inputs to the patient's chest wall.
Journal ArticleDOI
Gastrointestinal sounds and migrating motor complex in fasted humans.
Takeshi Tomomasa,Akihiro Morikawa,Richard H. Sandler,Hussein A. Mansy,Hiroaki Koneko,Tabata Masahiko,Paul E. Hyman,Zen Itoh +7 more
TL;DR: The chronological relation between antral motility and gastrointestinal sounds, and the dissimilar effects of erythromycin and somatostatin, suggest that antral contractions increase gastrointestinalSounds, perhaps by supplying gas into the intestine.