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S. Yasumura

Researcher at Brookhaven National Laboratory

Publications -  50
Citations -  2007

S. Yasumura is an academic researcher from Brookhaven National Laboratory. The author has contributed to research in topics: Body water & Neutron activation. The author has an hindex of 22, co-authored 50 publications receiving 1975 citations. Previous affiliations of S. Yasumura include Mount Sinai St. Luke's and Mount Sinai Roosevelt & Winthrop-University Hospital.

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Compartmental body composition based on total-body nitrogen, potassium, and calcium

TL;DR: The loss of muscle mass and its protein content contrasts with the relative constancy of the nonmuscle lean tissue and suggests that skeletal muscle is particularly vulnerable to the aging process.
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Calcitriol in the treatment of postmenopausal osteoporosis

TL;DR: Calcitriol increased bone mineral density by decreasing bone resorption, but not by increasing bone formation, and it is possible that bone formation can be increased by achieving higher serum levels of the drug, whereas complications may be avoided by using a non-oral route of administration.
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Comparative skeletal mass and radial bone mineral content in black and white women

TL;DR: It is suggested that the larger muscle mass in black women is, in part, a determinant of their increased skeletal mass and is partly responsible for their apparent resistance to osteoporosis and fracture of the skeleton.
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Compartmental body composition of cancer patients by measurement of total body nitrogen, potassium, and water

TL;DR: The prompt gamma neutron activation and whole body counting techniques represent a considerable advance over the balance and radioisotope techniques used in earlier studies and make possible sequential studies over prolonged periods of time with a considerable degree of accuracy.
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Improved models for determination of body fat by in vivo neutron activation.

TL;DR: The closely correlated results obtained with the two models based on nuclear measurements support the conclusion that these techniques provide reliable measurements of total body fat.