World's Best Scientists 2026 revealed!

D-Index & Metrics

Medicine

D-Index
81
Citations
22802
World Ranking
16710
National Ranking
8383

Overview

Harry R. Keiser was affiliated with the National Institutes of Health in the United States. Their research work primarily fell within the field of Medicine, with a focus on several specialized subfields including Epidemiology, Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and Imaging, and Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health.

Their research topics encompassed areas related to congenital and prenatal health conditions, particularly:

  • Congenital Heart Disease Studies
  • Autopsy Techniques and Outcomes
  • Prenatal Screening and Diagnostics

Keiser's publication record includes recent work published in 2025. One noted paper was titled "Understanding Normal Fetal Cardiac Views at US", which appeared in the journal Radiographics. This paper did not have any citations recorded as of the latest data.

Their frequent co-authors included:

  • Venus Barlas
  • Shital Gandhi
  • Shravan Sridhar
  • Dorothy J. Shum

Radiographics was the primary venue for their publications, reflecting a focus on medical imaging and diagnostic techniques within their scholarly output.

Best Publications

  • Biochemical diagnosis of pheochromocytoma: which test is best?

    Jacques W. M. Lenders;Karel Pacak;McClellan M. Walther;W. Marston Linehan

  • Acetaminophen-induced hepatic injury: protective role of glutathione in man and rationale for therapy.

    Jerry R. Mitchell;Snorri S. Thorgeirsson;William Z. Potter;David J. Jollow

  • Biochemical Diagnosis of Pheochromocytoma: How to Distinguish True- from False-Positive Test Results

    Graeme Eisenhofer;David S. Goldstein;McClellan M. Walther;Peter Friberg

  • Validity and reliability of liquid chromatography with electrochemical detection for measuring plasma levels of norepinephrine and epinephrine in man.

    David S. Goldstein;Giora Feuerstein;Joseph L. Izzo;Irwin J. Kopin

  • Malignant Pheochromocytoma: Effective Treatment with a Combination of Cyclophosphamide, Vincristine, and Dacarbazine

    Steven D. Averbuch;Caryn S. Steakley;Robert C. Young;Edward P. Gelmann

  • Prostaglandin biosynthesis by rabbit renomedullary interstitial cells in tissue culture. Stimulation by angiotensin II, bradykinin, and arginine vasopressin.

    Randall M. Zusman;Harry R. Keiser

  • Simultaneous liquid-chromatographic determination of 3,4-dihydroxyphenylglycol, catecholamines, and 3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine in plasma, and their responses to inhibition of monoamine oxidase.

    G Eisenhofer;D S Goldstein;R Stull;H R Keiser

  • von Recklinghausen's disease and pheochromocytomas.

    McClellan M. Walther;Judi Herring;Erik Enquist;Harry R. Keiser

  • Bartter's syndrome: A disorder characterized by high urinary prostaglandins and a dependence of hyperreninemia on prostaglandin synthesis

    John R. Gill;Jurgen C. Fro¨lich;Robert E. Bowden;Addison A. Taylor

  • Plasma normetanephrine and metanephrine for detecting pheochromocytoma in von Hippel-Lindau disease and multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2.

    G. Eisenhofer;J. W. M. Lenders;W. M. Linehan;M. M. Walther

  • Increased incidence of isoniazid hepatitis in rapid acetylators: possible relation to hydrazine metabolites

    Jerry R. Mitchell M.D.;Unnur P. Thorgeirsson;Martin Black;John A. Timbrell

  • Effects of drugs on human blood platelet and plasma amine oxidase activity in vitro and in vivo.

    Donald S. Robinson;Walter Lovenberg;Harry Keiser;Albert Sjoerdsma

  • Effects of Dietary Sodium and of Acute Saline Infusion on the Interrelationship between Dopamine Excretion and Adrenergic Activity in Man

    R. Wayne Alexander;John R. Gill;Hirohiko Yamabe;Walter Lovenberg

  • Urinary Kallikrein Excretion in Hypertensive Man Relationships to Sodium intake and Sodium-Retaining Steroids

    Harry S. Margolius;David Horwitz;John J. Pisano;Harry R. Keiser

  • Plasma dihydroxyphenylglycol and the intraneuronal disposition of norepinephrine in humans.

    D S Goldstein;G Eisenhofer;R Stull;C J Folio

  • CLINICAL AND GENETIC CHARACTERIZATION OF PHEOCHROMOCYTOMA IN VON HIPPEL-LINDAU FAMILIES: COMPARISON WITH SPORADIC PHEOCHROMOCYTOMA GIVES INSIGHT INTO NATURAL HISTORY OF PHEOCHROMOCYTOMA

    McCLELLAN M. Walther;Robert Reiter;Harry R. Keiser;Peter L. Choyke

  • Plasma Metanephrines Are Markers of Pheochromocytoma Produced by Catechol-O-Methyltransferase Within Tumors

    Graeme Eisenhofer;Harry Keiser;Peter Friberg;Eva Mezey

  • Evidence for the existence of atrial natriuretic factor-containing neurons in the rat brain.

    David M. Jacobowitz;Gerhard Skofitsch;Harry R. Keiser;Robert L. Eskay

  • Urinary kallikrein excretion in normal man. Relationships to sodium intake and sodium-retaining steroids.

    Harry S. Margolius;David Horwitz;Ronald G. Geller;R. Wayne Alexander

  • Plasma Metanephrines in the Diagnosis of Pheochromocytoma

    Jacques W. M. Lenders;Harry R. Keiser;David S. Goldstein;Jacques J. Willemsen

Frequent Co-Authors

David S. Goldstein
David S. Goldstein National Institutes of Health
Irwin J. Kopin
Irwin J. Kopin National Institutes of Health
Albert Sjoerdsma
Albert Sjoerdsma National Institutes of Health
McClellan M. Walther
McClellan M. Walther National Institutes of Health
Michael A. Beaven
Michael A. Beaven National Institutes of Health
Walter Lovenberg
Walter Lovenberg National Institutes of Health
Jacques W.M. Lenders
Jacques W.M. Lenders Radboud University
W. Marston Linehan
W. Marston Linehan National Institutes of Health
John L. Doppman
John L. Doppman National Institutes of Health

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