World's Best Scientists 2026 revealed!

D-Index & Metrics

Medicine

D-Index
96
Citations
28567
World Ranking
9803
National Ranking
5038

Overview

Carolyn A. Bondy was affiliated with the National Institutes of Health in the United States during their career. Their research output includes contributions to healthcare research and healthcare delivery, with at least one documented publication.

Their recent paper is titled "Proceedings from the Turner Resource Network symposium: The crossroads of health care research and health care delivery", published in 2020 by UNC Libraries.

Frequent co-authors associated with their work included:

  • Philippe Backeljauw
  • Steven D. Chernausek
  • Joseph T. Cernich
  • David A. Cole
  • Laura P. Fasciano

Their publications appeared at venues such as:

  • UNC Libraries

Details on specific fields of study, subfields, and main research topics were not provided. No book publications or awards were recorded in available data.

Carolyn A. Bondy is deceased, and their documented work remains as part of the academic record in health care research contexts.

Best Publications

  • The Somatomedin Hypothesis: 2001

    Derek Le Roith;Carolyn Bondy;Shoshana Yakar;Jun-Li Liu

  • Care of Girls and Women with Turner Syndrome: A Guideline of the Turner Syndrome Study Group

    Carolyn A. Bondy

  • Androgens stimulate early stages of follicular growth in the primate ovary.

    K. A. Vendola;Jian Zhou;O. O. Adesanya;S. J. Weil

  • Androgen and follicle-stimulating hormone interactions in primate ovarian follicle development.

    Stacie Weil;Keith Vendola;Jian Zhou;Carolyn A. Bondy

  • Mater, a maternal effect gene required for early embryonic development in mice.

    Zhi-Bin Tong;Lyn Gold;Karl E. Pfeifer;Heidi Dorward

  • Insulin-like growth factors cross the blood-brain barrier

    R R Reinhardt;C A Bondy

  • Androgen Receptor Gene Expression in the Primate Ovary: Cellular Localization, Regulation, and Functional Correlations

    S. J. Weil;K. Vendola;J. Zhou;O. O. Adesanya

  • Androgens Promote Oocyte Insulin-Like Growth Factor I Expression and Initiation of Follicle Development in the Primate Ovary

    Keith Vendola;Jian Zhou;Jie Wang;Oluyemisi A. Famuyiwa

  • Signaling by insulin-like growth factor 1 in brain.

    Carolyn A. Bondy;Clara M. Cheng

  • Cellular pattern of type-I insulin-like growth factor receptor gene expression during maturation of the rat brain: Comparison with insulin-like growth factors I and II

    C. Bondy;H. Werner;C.T. Roberts;D. LeRoith

  • Transient IGF-I gene expression during the maturation of functionally related central projection neurons

    Carolyn A. Bondy

  • Aortic Dilatation and Dissection in Turner Syndrome

    Lea Ann Matura;Vincent B. Ho;Douglas R. Rosing;Carolyn A. Bondy

  • Major Vascular Anomalies in Turner Syndrome Prevalence and Magnetic Resonance Angiographic Features

    Vincent B. Ho;Vladimir K. Bakalov;Margaret Cooley;Phillip L. Van

  • Insulin-Like Growth Factor I Regulates Gonadotropin Responsiveness in the Murine Ovary

    Jian Zhou;T. Rajendra Kumar;Martin M. Matzuk;Carolyn Bondy

  • Cellular pattern of insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) and type I IGF receptor gene expression in early organogenesis: comparison with IGF-II gene expression.

    Carolyn A. Bondy;Haim Werner;Charles T. Roberts;Derek LeRoith

  • Igf1 promotes longitudinal bone growth by insulin-like actions augmenting chondrocyte hypertrophy

    Jie Wang;Jian Zhou;Carolyn A. Bondy

  • Insulin-like growth factor I gene expression is induced in astrocytes during experimental demyelination.

    Samuel Komoly;Lynn D. Hudson;Henry Def. Webster;Carolyn A. Bondy

  • Insulin-like growth factor 1 regulates developing brain glucose metabolism

    Clara M. Cheng;Rickey R. Reinhardt;Wei-Hua Lee;George Joncas

  • Testosterone inhibits estrogen-induced mammary epithelial proliferation and suppresses estrogen receptor expression

    Jian Zhou;Siu Ng;O. Adesanya-Famuiya;Kristin Anderson

  • CLINICAL PRACTICE GUIDELINE Care of Girls and Women with Turner Syndrome: A Guideline of the Turner Syndrome Study Group

    Carolyn A. Bondy

Frequent Co-Authors

Douglas R. Rosing
Douglas R. Rosing National Institutes of Health
Mehdi Shakibaei
Mehdi Shakibaei Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München
Ali Mobasheri
Ali Mobasheri University of Oulu
Kelle H. Moley
Kelle H. Moley Washington University in St. Louis
Stephen M. Richardson
Stephen M. Richardson University of Manchester
Judith A. Hoyland
Judith A. Hoyland University of Manchester
Andrew E. Arai
Andrew E. Arai National Institutes of Health
Judith L. Ross
Judith L. Ross Thomas Jefferson University
Henry deF. Webster
Henry deF. Webster National Institutes of Health
Michael Brenner
Michael Brenner University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Best Scientists Citing Carolyn A. Bondy