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Terry T. Turner

Researcher at Department of Urology, University of Virginia

Publications -  112
Citations -  6155

Terry T. Turner is an academic researcher from Department of Urology, University of Virginia. The author has contributed to research in topics: Varicocele & Epididymis. The author has an hindex of 41, co-authored 112 publications receiving 5855 citations. Previous affiliations of Terry T. Turner include University of Virginia & Johns Hopkins University.

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Modulation of mammalian life span by the short isoform of p53

TL;DR: Overexpression of the short isoform of p53 (p44) has unexpectedly uncovered a role for p53 in the regulation of size and life span in the mouse, suggesting pathways of gene activity known to regulate longevity in lower organisms are linked in mammals via p53 to mechanisms for controlling cell proliferation.
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Oxidative stress: a common factor in testicular dysfunction.

TL;DR: Testicular oxidative stress appears to be a common feature in much of what underlies male infertility, which suggests that there may be benefits to developing better antioxidant therapies for relevant cases of hypospermatogenesis.
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Influence of surgically induced varicocele on testicular blood flow, temperature, and histology in adult rats and dogs.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used Strontium 85 (SR-85)-labeled microspheres (15 +/- 1.1 micrometer) to measure testicular blood flow in rats and dogs.
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Acute testicular ischemia results in germ cell-specific apoptosis in the rat.

TL;DR: A significant increase in both leukocyte margination and diapedesis occurred 4 h after torsion repair as did a significant increaseIn intratesticular lipid peroxidation products, consistent with the hypothesis that post-torsion, germ cell-specific apoptosis is induced by reactive oxygen species.
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The Mouse Epididymal Transcriptome: Transcriptional Profiling of Segmental Gene Expression in the Epididymis

TL;DR: These analyses elucidate the changes in gene expression along the length of the epididymis for 17 000 expressed transcripts and provide a powerful resource for the research community in future studies of the biological factors that mediate epididcyal sperm maturation.