J. Andrew Daubenspeck, BS, PhD
Title(s)
Emeritus Professor of Physiology and Neurobiology
Department(s)
Physiology and Neurobiology
Education
Swarthmore College, BSME, 1966
Dartmouth College, Ph.D. Engineering Science, 1972
Programs
Program in Experimental and Molecular Medicine
Websites
http:
Contact Information
351 Poverty Lane
Lebanon NH 03766
Phone: 603/448-2855
Email: andy.daubenspeck@dartmouth.edu
Professional Interests
Dr. Daubenspeck became Active Emeritus in 2011 and continued teaching cardiopulmonary physiology to first year medical students until 2016. Since then, he has collaborated with Dr. James Leiter and Dr. Brian Lucas on a project involving mathematical simulation of body fluid shifts during dialysis in patients suffering from volume overload due to cardiac and renal causes. The goal is to optimize the removal of fluid from the vascular volume under the constraints of time of dialysis and patient comfort.
Relative Blood Volume Profiles Hours After Loop Diuretic Administration: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis. Pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide drives cardiorespiratory responses to heat stress in neonatal mice. Partial Raphe Dysfunction in Neurotransmission Is Sufficient to Increase Mortality after Anoxic Exposures in Mice at a Critical Period in Postnatal Development. Subtle alterations in breathing and heart rate control in the 5-HT1A receptor knockout mouse in early postnatal development. Postnatal loss of brainstem serotonin neurones compromises the ability of neonatal rats to survive episodic severe hypoxia. Failed heart rate recovery at a critical age in 5-HT-deficient mice exposed to episodic anoxia: implications for SIDS. Toward feedback controlled deep brain stimulation: dynamics of glutamate release in the subthalamic nucleus in rats. Acoustic plethysmography measures breathing in unrestrained neonatal mice. A computational analysis of central CO2 chemosensitivity in Helix aspersa. Reduced respiratory-related evoked activity in subjects with obstructive sleep apnea syndrome. |