David Handelsman
ANZAC Research Institute, NSW, Australia
- This delegate is presenting an abstract at this event.
David J Handelsman is Professor of Reproductive Endocrinology and Andrology, University of Sydney, inaugural Professor/Director, ANZAC Research Institute and the founding Head, Andrology Department, Concord Hospital. As a career clinician scientist in Andrology (male reproductive health, medicine and biology) he became Australia’s first Professor of Andrology (1996) and established the only hospital Andrology Department (1999). His research into androgen physiology, pharmacology and toxicology spans basic, clinical and public health domains including genetic models of androgen action; steroid mass spectrometry; sports endocrinology and anti-doping science; clinical androgen pharmacology; androgens and male ageing and the use, misuse and abuse of androgens. A Life Member of Endocrine Society of Australia, Society for Reproductive Biology and Fellow, Australian Academy of Health and Medical Sciences, he has served on the Australian Drug Evaluation Committee, WHO Human Reproduction Program and World Anti-Doping Agency and has provided expert testimony to the Federal Court of Australia and anti-doping tribunals including the Court for Arbitration in Sport for WADA, IAAF, IOC and ASADA.
Presentations this author is a contributor to:
Oral low-dose testosterone administration induces whole-body protein anabolism: a novel liver-targeted therapy (#314)
5:00 PM
Vita Birzniece
ESA Poster Session - Clinical
Uterine gland specific androgen actions regulate PTEN inactivation induced uterine pathology (#170)
12:45 PM
Jaesung Peter Choi
ESA Basic Orals - Emerging Investigators
Androgen receptor mediated androgen action inhibits pubertal mammary gland development by down-regulating ERa and b-catenin signalling (#45)
1:30 PM
Yan Ru Gao
ESA Basic Orals - Cancer
Effect of a Sertoli cell-selective knockout of the glucocorticoid receptor on spermatogenesis and testicular function (#131)
2:00 PM
Rasmani Hazra
SRB Orals - Spermatogenesis and testicular function