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51. Are there variances of calculated free testosterone attributed to variations in albumin and sex hormone-binding globulin concentrations in men?

52. 5α-reductases in human physiology: an unfolding story.

53. Estrogens in men: clinical implications for sexual function and the treatment of testosterone deficiency.

54. Dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA)--a precursor steroid or an active hormone in human physiology.

55. Induced testosterone deficiency: from clinical presentation of fatigue, erectile dysfunction and muscle atrophy to insulin resistance and diabetes.

56. Androgen deficiency and mitochondrial dysfunction: implications for fatigue, muscle dysfunction, insulin resistance, diabetes, and cardiovascular disease.

57. The mitotic phosphorylation of p54(nrb) modulates its RNA binding activity.

58. Testosterone deficiency.

59. Adverse side effects of 5α-reductase inhibitors therapy: persistent diminished libido and erectile dysfunction and depression in a subset of patients.

60. Testosterone and cardiovascular disease: an old idea with modern clinical implications.

61. Role of androgens in modulating male and female sexual function.

62. Safety of physiological testosterone therapy in women: lessons from female-to-male transsexuals (FMT) treated with pharmacological testosterone therapy.

63. Biochemical factors modulating female genital sexual arousal physiology.

64. Testosterone and risk of breast cancer: appraisal of existing evidence.

65. Epidermal growth factor receptor expression escapes androgen regulation in prostate cancer: a potential molecular switch for tumour growth.

66. Androgen deficiency and atherosclerosis: The lipid link.

67. Mechanisms of obesity and related pathologies: androgen deficiency and endothelial dysfunction may be the link between obesity and erectile dysfunction.

68. Estradiol ameliorates diabetes-induced changes in vaginal structure of db/db mouse model.

69. The dark side of testosterone deficiency: III. Cardiovascular disease.

70. Obesity and erectile dysfunction: is androgen deficiency the common link?

71. Androgens play a pivotal role in maintaining penile tissue architecture and erection: a review.

72. Estradiol restores diabetes-induced reductions in sex steroid receptor expression and distribution in the vagina of db/db mouse model.

73. Testosterone therapy in women with gynecological and sexual disorders: a triumph of clinical endocrinology from 1938 to 2008.

74. Shifting the paradigm of testosterone and prostate cancer: the saturation model and the limits of androgen-dependent growth.

75. The dark side of testosterone deficiency: II. Type 2 diabetes and insulin resistance.

76. The dark side of testosterone deficiency: I. Metabolic syndrome and erectile dysfunction.

78. Pharmacological and functional characterization of novel EP and DP receptor agonists: DP1 receptor mediates penile erection in multiple species.

79. The brain, the penis and steroid hormones: clinical correlates with endothelial dysfunction.

80. Testosterone and erectile function: from basic research to a new clinical paradigm for managing men with androgen insufficiency and erectile dysfunction.

81. Testosterone increases blood flow and expression of androgen and estrogen receptors in the rat vagina.

82. Effects of tamoxifen on vaginal blood flow and epithelial morphology in the rat.

83. Differential regulation of the expression of estrogen, progesterone, and androgen receptors by sex steroid hormones in the vagina: immunohistochemical studies.

84. The evolving role of testosterone in the treatment of erectile dysfunction.

85. Identification of G2/M targets for the MAP kinase pathway by functional proteomics.

86. Dose-response relationship between testosterone and erectile function: evidence for the existence of a critical threshold.

87. Streptozotocin-induced diabetes in the rat is associated with changes in vaginal hemodynamics, morphology and biochemical markers.

88. Are androgens critical for penile erections in humans? Examining the clinical and preclinical evidence.

89. Alpha-adrenoceptors are a common denominator in the pathophysiology of erectile function and BPH/LUTS--implications for clinical practice.

90. Differential effects of estradiol, progesterone, and testosterone on vaginal structural integrity.

91. Weapons of penile smooth muscle destruction: androgen deficiency promotes accumulation of adipocytes in the corpus cavernosum.

92. The multifunctional nuclear protein p54nrb is multiphosphorylated in mitosis and interacts with the mitotic regulator Pin1.

93. Adipocyte accumulation in penile corpus cavernosum of the orchiectomized rabbit: a potential mechanism for veno-occlusive dysfunction in androgen deficiency.

94. Physiology of female sexual function: animal models.

95. Modulation of rat vaginal blood flow and estrogen receptor by estradiol.

96. Role of arginase in the male and female sexual arousal response.

97. An in vivo rat model to investigate female vaginal arousal response.

98. Effects of ovariectomy and steroid hormones on vaginal smooth muscle contractility.

99. Binding characteristics of [3H]delta(5)-androstene-3beta,17beta-diol to a nuclear protein in the rabbit vagina.

100. Role of the nitric oxide-cyclic GMP pathway in regulation of vaginal blood flow.

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