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Medicine

D-Index
74
Citations
22576
World Ranking
19352
National Ranking
9636

Overview

Charles V. Vorhees is affiliated with the University of Cincinnati Medical Center in the United States and has contributed extensively to the fields of medicine and neuroscience. Their research encompasses a range of topics within these disciplines, with a focus on neurobehavioral science and toxicology.

The major fields of study for Vorhees include:

  • Medicine
  • Neuroscience

Subfields of study related to their work are:

  • Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience
  • Psychiatry and Mental health
  • Cognitive Neuroscience
  • Molecular Biology
  • Behavioral Neuroscience

The primary topics explored in Vorhees's publications involve:

  • Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder
  • Stress Responses and Cortisol
  • Neuroscience and Neuropharmacology Research
  • Neuroendocrine regulation and behavior
  • Memory and Neural Mechanisms
  • Neurotransmitter Receptor Influence on Behavior
  • Pesticide Exposure and Toxicity

Frequent collaborators include:

  • Michael T. Williams
  • Samantha L. Regan
  • Chiho Sugimoto
  • Adam L. Fritz
  • Emily M. Pitzer

Vorhees has published in various scientific journals, with frequent contributions to:

  • Neurotoxicology and Teratology
  • Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews
  • Translational Psychiatry
  • Genes Brain & Behavior
  • Current Research in Toxicology

Representative recent papers authored or co-authored by Vorhees include:

  • "Review of rodent models of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder," 2021, Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews
  • "Effects of pyrethroids on brain development and behavior: Deltamethrin," 2021, Neurotoxicology and Teratology
  • "Chronic psychosocial stress during pregnancy affects maternal behavior and neuroendocrine function and modulates hypothalamic CRH and nuclear steroid receptor expression," 2020, Translational Psychiatry
  • "Translating Neurobehavioral Toxicity Across Species From Zebrafish to Rats to Humans: Implications for Risk Assessment," 2021, Frontiers in Toxicology
  • "The potassium channel Kv4.2 regulates dendritic spine morphology, electroencephalographic characteristics and seizure susceptibility in mice," 2020, Experimental Neurology

Best Publications

  • Morris water maze: procedures for assessing spatial and related forms of learning and memory

    Charles V Vorhees;Michael T Williams

  • Assessing spatial learning and memory in rodents.

    Charles V. Vorhees;Michael T. Williams

  • Cerebral ischemia-hypoxia induces intravascular coagulation and autophagy.

    Faisal Adhami;Faisal Adhami;Guanghong Liao;Yury M. Morozov;Aryn Schloemer

  • Hypoxia-Ischemia Induces DNA Synthesis without Cell Proliferation in Dying Neurons in Adult Rodent Brain

    Chia Yi Kuan;Aryn J. Schloemer;Aigang Lu;Aigang Lu;Kevin A. Burns

  • Deficiency in Na,K-ATPase α Isoform Genes Alters Spatial Learning, Motor Activity, and Anxiety in Mice

    Amy E. Moseley;Michael T. Williams;Tori L. Schaefer;Cynthia S. Bohanan

  • The effects of neonatal isoflurane exposure in mice on brain cell viability, adult behavior, learning, and memory.

    Andreas W. Loepke;George K. Istaphanous;John J. Mcauliffe;Lili Miles

  • Targeted disruption of the murine Nhe1 locus induces ataxia, growth retardation, and seizures.

    Sheila M. Bell;Claire M. Schreiner;Patrick J. Schultheis;Marian L. Miller

  • Comparison of the elevated plus and elevated zero mazes in treated and untreated male Sprague-Dawley rats: effects of anxiolytic and anxiogenic agents.

    Amanda A. Braun;Matthew R. Skelton;Charles V. Vorhees;Michael T. Williams

  • Psychotropic drugs as behavioral teratogens

    Charles V. Vorhees;Robert L. Brunner;Richard E. Butcher

  • Collaborative Behavioral Teratology Study: results.

    J Buelke-Sam;C A Kimmel;J Adams;C J Nelson

  • 3,4-Methylenedioxymethamphetamine (Ecstasy)-Induced Learning and Memory Impairments Depend on the Age of Exposure during Early Development

    Harry W. Broening;LaRonda L. Morford;Sandra L. Inman-Wood;Masao Fukumura

  • Neuronopathic Gaucher disease in the mouse: viable combined selective saposin C deficiency and mutant glucocerebrosidase (V394L) mice with glucosylsphingosine and glucosylceramide accumulation and progressive neurological deficits

    Ying Ying Sun;Benjamin Liou;Huimin Ran;Matthew R. Skelton

  • A developmental test battery for neurobehavioral toxicity in rats: a preliminary analysis using monosodium glutamate calcium carrageenan, and hydroxyurea.

    Charles V. Vorhees;Charles V. Vorhees;Charles V. Vorhees;Richard E. Butcher;Richard E. Butcher;Richard E. Butcher;Robert L. Brunner;Robert L. Brunner;Robert L. Brunner;Thomas J. Sobotka;Thomas J. Sobotka;Thomas J. Sobotka

  • Behavioral responses to cocaine and amphetamine administration in mice lacking the dopamine D1 receptor.

    Ming Xu;Yihe Guo;Charles V. Vorhees;Jianhua Zhang

  • A Developmental Neurotoxicity Evaluation of the Effects of Prenatal Exposure to Fluoxetine in Rats

    Charles V. Vorhees;Karen D. Acuff-Smith;Mary A. Schilling;J. Edward Fisher

  • Teratogenicity and developmental toxicity of valproic acid in rats

    Charles V. Vorhees

  • Phosphodiesterase 1B knock-out mice exhibit exaggerated locomotor hyperactivity and DARPP-32 phosphorylation in response to dopamine agonists and display impaired spatial learning

    Tracy M. Reed;David R. Repaske;Gretchen L. Snyder;Paul Greengard

  • A single dose model of methamphetamine-induced neurotoxicity in rats : effects on neostriatal monoamines and glial fibrillary acidic protein

    Masao Fukumura;Gregg D Cappon;Gregg D Cappon;Cunfeng Pu;Cunfeng Pu;Harry W Broening;Harry W Broening

  • Stage-specific effects of prenatal d-methamphetamine exposure on behavioral and eye development in rats

    K D Acuff-Smith;M A Schilling;J E Fisher;C V Vorhees

  • Developmental dissociation of methamphetamine-induced depletion of dopaminergic terminals and astrocyte reaction in rat striatum.

    Cunfeng Pu;Charles V. Vorhees

Frequent Co-Authors

Michael T. Williams
Michael T. Williams University of Cincinnati Medical Center
Gary A. Gudelsky
Gary A. Gudelsky University of Cincinnati
Daniel W. Nebert
Daniel W. Nebert University of Cincinnati
David P. Witte
David P. Witte Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center
Kim B. Seroogy
Kim B. Seroogy University of Cincinnati
Ming Xu
Ming Xu University of Chicago
Jerry B. Lingrel
Jerry B. Lingrel University of Cincinnati
William D. O'Brien
William D. O'Brien University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Neil M. Richtand
Neil M. Richtand University of California - San Diego School of Medicine
Jianhua Zhang
Jianhua Zhang The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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