Publications by authors named "R Gandelman"

Frontal intermittent rhythmic delta activity is an electrographic pattern of unclear origin. Previously thought to correlate with deep midline and infratentorial pathology, rather, it appears to be associated with encephalopathy states in adults. The significance of frontal intermittent rhythmic delta activity in children has not been studied.

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Male copulatory behavior of adult female mice given slow-release capsules of testosterone was examined in animals that developed in utero contiguous to two males (mFm) or to two females (fFf). Other females of unspecified uterine position which were injected with testosterone propionate on the day of birth as well as intact males also were examined. mFm and fFf females did not differ on any measure; latency to the first mount, number of mount bouts, number of mount bouts with genital thrusting.

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Fetal female guinea pigs were delivered surgically and their position within a uterine horn relative to male fetuses was noted. When adult they were ovariectomized, injected daily with testosterone propionate, and examined for male copulatory behaviors in response to the presence of a receptive female. Females that developed contiguous to a caudal male were functionally similar to those that had been situated between two males; both exhibited enhanced levels of mounting relative to females that were located contiguous to no males (with and without the presence of a caudal male) and to females contiguous to a cephalic male.

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All but one mouse embryo were removed from uteri on Day 8 of gestation and delivered via cesarean section on Day 18. Singletons were compared on various developmental indices to similarly delivered controls permitted to reside in uteri containing the normal complement of fetuses. The former were heavier at birth and weaning, had smaller ano-genital distance ratios (ano-genital distance/delivery weight), and displayed walking, gripping, eye-opening, and vaginal-opening earlier than controls.

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Ano-genital distance (AGD) obtained from male and female mice at birth correlated significantly with body weight. Body length did not correlate significantly with AGD in females. Although it did so in the males, the coefficient accounted for less than half of the variance relative to that obtained by correlating AGD with weight.

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