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         Yalow Rosalyn:     more books (17)
  1. Rosalyn Yalow: Nobel Laureate: Her Life and Work in Medicine (Helix Books) by Eugene Straus, 2000-01-07
  2. Radioimmunoassay (Benchmark papers in microbiology) by Rosalyn S. (editor) Yalow, 1983
  3. Peptide Hormones. Methods in Investigative and Diagnostic Endocrinology Volumes 2A & 2B by Solomon A. Berson, Rosalyn S. Yalow, 1973
  4. Rosalyn Sussman Yalow: An entry from Gale's <i>Science and Its Times</i> by Lois N. Magner, 2001
  5. YALOW, ROSALYN SUSSMAN (1921- ): An entry from Gale's <i>World of Microbiology and Immunology</i>
  6. Yalow, Rosalyn Sussman: An entry from Macmillan Reference USA's <i>Chemistry: Foundations and Applications</i> by Mary R. S. Creese, 2004
  7. Biography - Yalow, Rosalyn Sussman (1921-): An article from: Contemporary Authors by Gale Reference Team, 2003-01-01
  8. Radiation and Public Perception: Benefits and Risks (Advances in Chemistry Series)
  9. Nuklearmediziner: George de Hevesy, Otmar Schober, Rosalyn Sussman Yalow, Gynter Mödder, Andrew Newberg, Elmar Doppelfeld (German Edition)
  10. METHODS IN INVESTIGATIVE AND DIAGNOSTIC ENDOCRINOLOGY 2A PART I GENERAL METHODOLOGY PART II PITUITARY HORMONES AND HYPOTHALAMIC RELEASING FACTORS, AND 2B PART III NON-PITUITARY HORMONES by SOLOMON A. BERSON AND ROSALYN S. YALOW, 1973
  11. Methods in Radioimmunoassay of Peptide Hormones
  12. Radiation and Public Perception : Benefits and Risks ( Advances in Chemistry Ser by Jack P. (editor); Yalow, Rosalyn S. (editor) Young, 1995-01-01
  13. Rosalyn Yalow, Nobel Laureate : Her Life & Work in Medicine: A Biographical Memo by Eugene Straus, 1998-01-01
  14. ROSALYN YALOW, NOBEL LAUREATE: HER LIFE AND WORK IN MEDICINE, A BIOGRAPHICAL MEM by Eugene Straus, 1998-01-01

1. Rosalyn Yalow Winner Of The 1977 Nobel Prize In Medicine
rosalyn yalow, a nobel Prize Laureate in Physiology and Medicine, at the nobelPrize Internet Archive. rosalyn yalow. 1977 nobel Laureate in Medicine
http://almaz.com/nobel/medicine/1977c.html
R OSALYN Y ALOW
1977 Nobel Laureate in Medicine
    for the development of radioimmunoassays of peptide hormones.
Background
    Born: 1921
    Residence: U.S.A.
    Affiliation: Veterans Administration Hospital, Bronx, NY
Featured Internet Links Nobel News Links Links added by Nobel Internet Archive visitors Back to The Nobel Prize Internet Archive
Literature
Peace ... Medicine We always welcome your feedback and comments

2. Index Of Nobel Laureates In Medicine
yalow, rosalyn, 1977. Zinkernagel, Rolf M. 1996. Back to The nobel Prize InternetArchive Literature * Peace * Chemistry * Physics * Economics * Medicine
http://almaz.com/nobel/medicine/alpha.html
ALPHABETICAL LISTING OF NOBEL PRIZE LAUREATES IN PHYSIOLOGY AND MEDICINE
Name Year Awarded Adrian, Lord Edgar Douglas Arber, Werner Axelrod, Julius Baltimore, David ... Medicine We always welcome your feedback and comments

3. Rosalyn Yalow - Autobiography
rosalyn yalow – Autobiography. I was born on the world. It seemedas if every major experiment brought a nobel Prize. Eve Curie
http://www.nobel.se/medicine/laureates/1977/yalow-autobio.html
I was born on July 19, 1921 in New York City and have always resided and worked there except for 3 1/2 years when I was a graduate student at the University of Illinois
Perhaps the earliest memories I have are of being a stubborn, determined child. Through the years my mother has told me that it was fortunate that I chose to do acceptable things, for if I had chosen otherwise no one could have deflected me from my path.
By seventh grade I was committed to mathematics. A great chemistry teacher at Walton High School, Mr. Mondzak, excited my interest in chemistry, but when I went to Hunter, the college for women in New York City's college system (now the City University of New York ), my interest was diverted to physics especially by Professors Herbert N. Otis and Duane Roller. In the late '30's when I was in college, physics, and in particular nuclear physics, was the most exciting field in the world. It seemed as if every major experiment brought a Nobel Prize. Eve Curie had just published the biography of her mother, Madame Marie Curie , which should be a must on the reading list of every young aspiring female scientist. As a Junior at college, I was hanging from the rafters in Room 301 of Pupin Laboratories (a physics lecture room at

4. Medicine 1977
The nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1977. Roger Guillemin, Andrew V. Schally,rosalyn yalow. 1/4 of the prize, 1/4 of the prize, 1/2 of the prize. USA, USA, USA.
http://www.nobel.se/medicine/laureates/1977/
The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1977
"for their discoveries concerning the peptide hormone production of the brain" "for the development of radioimmunoassays of peptide hormones" Roger Guillemin Andrew V. Schally Rosalyn Yalow 1/4 of the prize 1/4 of the prize 1/2 of the prize USA USA USA The Salk Institute
San Diego, CA, USA Veterans Administration Hospital
New Orleans, LA, USA Veterans Administration Hospital
Bronx, NY, USA b. 1924
(in Dijon, France) b. 1926
(in Wilno, Poland) b. 1921 The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1977
Press Release

Presentation Speech
Roger Guillemin ...
Other Resources
The 1977 Prize in:
Physics

Chemistry
Physiology or Medicine Literature ... Economic Sciences Find a Laureate: Last modified June 16, 2000 The Official Web Site of The Nobel Foundation

5. CWP At Physics.UCLA.edu // Yalow
Additional Information/Comments. Autobiography written for nobel Foundation. Tocite this citation yalow, rosalyn Sussman. CWP ~ubenj/cwp/ .
http://www.physics.ucla.edu/~ubenj/cwp/Phase2/Yalow,_Rosalyn_Sussman@861234567.h
Physicists Distinguished in Other Fields
Contributions Publications Honors
Rosalyn Sussman Yalow
Jobs/Positions Education Additional Information
Some Important Contributions:
Developed, in collaboration with S. A. Berson, methods of using radioactive isotopes to investigate physiological systems that allow detection of minute concentrations of biological or pharmacological substances in blood or other fluid samples. These techniques are known as radioimmunoassay or RIA. Radioimmunoassay is a test combining the use of radioactive isotopes with immunology to measure hormones, enzymes and other substances that exist in such low concentrations in the body that they can be impossible to detect by any other laboratory methods. [36 UN] Her work included the basic science, mathematical analysis, biomedical studies and instrumentation. Yalow and Berson demonstrated that insulin is bound by antibodies in some diabetics, which leads to abnormal degradation of the insulin. It had been previously thought that diabetes is due to deficiency of insulin secretion. "RIA has been used to screen blood for hepatitis virus in blood banks, to determine effective dosage levels of drugs and antibiotics, to detect foreign substances in the blood, to treat dwarfed children with growth hormones, to test and correct hormone levels in infertile couples, and in many other fields. RIA made endocrinology one of the hottest fields in medical research." - Danuta Bois in Microscoft Encarta

6. Yalow, Rosalyn (1921-) -- From Eric Weisstein's World Of Scientific Biography
Prize Winners , nobel Prize , Medicine and Physiology Prize v. yalow, rosalyn(1921), For this work, she shared the 1977 nobel Prize for medicine.
http://scienceworld.wolfram.com/biography/Yalow.html
Branch of Science Biochemists Nationality American ... Medicine and Physiology Prize
Yalow, Rosalyn (1921-)

American biophysicist who worked out the technique of radioimmunoassay, which can locate trace quantities of antibodies and other biologically active substances in the body using radioactively labeled isotopes. For this work, she shared the 1977 Nobel Prize for medicine.
Additional biographies: Nobel Foundation
Author: Eric W. Weisstein

7. Rosalyn Yalow I Love Investigation - Nobel Prize In Medicine/
rosalyn yalow, winner of the 1977 nobel Prize in Medicine/Physiology, is a medicalinvestigator at the Veterans Administration Hospital, Bronx, New York, and a
http://www.njabr.org/superstars/laureates/RYalow.cfm

8. JCE Online: Biographical Snapshots: Snapshot
rosalyn Sussman yalow was awarded the 1977 nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicinefor an analytical technique called radioimmunoassay (RIA) which accurately
http://jchemed.chem.wisc.edu/JCEWWW/Features/eChemists/Bios/Yalow.html
Subscriptions Software Orders Support Contributors ... Biographical Snapshots Biographical Snapshots of Famous Women and Minority Chemists: Snapshot This short biographical "snapshot" provides basic information about the person's chemical work, gender, ethnicity, and cultural background. A list of references is given along with additional WWW sites to further your exploration into the life and work of this chemist.
Rosalyn Sussman Yalow Born: Major discipline: Medical Physics Died: Minor discipline:
Rosalyn Sussman Yalow was awarded the 1977 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for an analytical technique called radioimmunoassay (RIA) which accurately measures trace amounts of substances, such as insulin, in the body. She was the first American-born woman to win a Nobel Prize in science. Rosalyn Yalow was born in the Bronx, New York on July 19, 1921. She graduated magna cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa from Hunter College in 1941. She was the first woman since 1917 to receive a teaching assistantship in physics at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, where she taught and worked toward her M.S. degree in physics. In 1942 she married fellow graduate student Aaron Yalow. Three years later, she received her Ph.D. degree in nuclear physics. While teaching at Hunter College in 1946, she began to volunteer in Dr. Edith Quimby's laboratory at the College of Physicians and Surgeons at Columbia University. Here she gained experience in the application of radioisotopes to solve medical problems. She became a consultant to the Veterans Administration Hospital in the Bronx, during which time she began studying the use of radioisotopes in clinical diagnosis, therapy, and analysis. In 1950 Solomon A. Berson joined her group and remained a collaborator until his death in 1972. They jointly discovered and developed the RIA technique for insulin. Yalow was the first woman to receive the Albert Lasker Basic Medical Research Award in 1976.

9. Yalow, Rosalyn S.
in full rosalyn SUSSMAN yalow (b. July 19 medical physicist, joint recipient (withAndrew V. Schally and Roger Guillemin) of the 1977 nobel Prize for
http://www.britannica.com/nobel/micro/647_47.html
Yalow, Rosalyn S.,
Rosalyn S. Yalow in her lab, 1977 UPI/Corbis-Bettmann in full ROSALYN SUSSMAN YALOW (b. July 19, 1921, New York, N.Y., U.S.), American medical physicist, joint recipient (with Andrew V. Schally and Roger Guillemin ) of the 1977 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine for her development of the technique of radioimmunoassay (RIA). Yalow graduated from Hunter College in New York City in 1941 and four years later received her Ph.D. in physics from the University of Illinois. From 1946 to 1950 she lectured on physics at Hunter. In 1947 she became a consultant in nuclear physics to the Bronx Veterans Administration Hospital, where from 1950 to 1970 she was physicist and assistant chief of the radioisotope service. With a colleague, Solomon A. Berson, Yalow began investigating various medical applications of radioactive isotopes. By combining techniques from radioisotope tracing and immunology, she developed RIA, which proved to be a very sensitive and simple means for measuring minute concentrations of biological and pharmacological substances in blood or other fluid samples. RIA was first applied by Yalow and Berson in 1959 in studying insulin concentration in the blood of diabetics, but the method soon found hundreds of other applications. In 1976 Yalow became the first woman to be awarded the Albert Lasker Prize for basic medical research. From 1973 she was director of the Solomon A. Berson Research Laboratory.

10. Yalow, Rosalyn S. -- Encyclopædia Britannica Online Article
in full rosalyn Sussman yalow American medical physicist and joint recipient(with Andrew V. Schally and Roger Guillemin) of the 1977 nobel Prize for
http://www.britannica.com/eb/article?eu=79837

11. JAMA -- Page Not Found
280;11971198, October 7, 1998, rosalyn yalow, nobel Laureate Her Life and Workin MedicineWalking Out on the Boys, Margaret W. Rossiter, PhD.
http://jama.ama-assn.org/issues/v280n13/ffull/jbk1007-1.html
Select Journal or Resource JAMA Archives of Dermatology Facial Plastic Surgery Family Medicine (1992-2000) General Psychiatry Internal Medicine Neurology Ophthalmology Surgery MSJAMA Science News Updates Meetings Peer Review Congress
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12. Rosalyn Yalow Nobel Laureate : Her Life And Work In Medicine : A Biographical Me
rosalyn yalow nobel Laureate Her Life and Work in Medicine A Biographical Memoir. rosalynyalow was only the second woman to win a nobel Prize in medicine.
http://hallbiographies.com/professionals_academics/615.shtml
Rosalyn Yalow Nobel Laureate : Her Life and Work in Medicine : A Biographical Memoir
Home
by Eugene Straus
See More Details

Plenum Pr; ISBN: 0306457962 ; Dimensions (in inches): 1.06 x 9.27 x 6.42
Other Editions: Paperback Reviews
Booknews, Inc.
From Booklist , May 15, 1998
The author, Eugene Straus, estraus@ibm.net , December 28, 1998
Women have a hard time in medical and scientific careers.
Rosalyn Yalow was only the second woman to win a Nobel Prize in medicine. Her life and career have been shaped by the powerful obstacles that women face in developing careers at the top of their fields. The ways in which she dealt with these obstacles were unique, interesting, and tragic. Men feared her, women disliked her, feminists distrusted her. She is among the most complex figures of our time. I was a witness and a participant in her struggles. I wrote this book so that men and women might consider how gender bias and other inequalities continue to thwart talented individuals. Big time science is still very much a man's world. From Yalow's story we can learn about our American values, about our scientific establishment, and about our own ambitious impulses. If we fail to learn from trailblazers like Yalow then we all have a harder way to go. Here is the story of an alpha female, someone who could lead the pack, even if it was all men.

13. Rosalyn Yalow, Nobel Laureate: Her Life And Work In Medicine. By Eugene Straus
7, No. 2, S14304171(02)02550-5, 10.1007/s00897020550a, © 2002 Springer-VerlagNew York, Inc. rosalyn yalow, nobel Laureate Her Life and Work in Medicine.
http://chemed.boisestate.edu/bibs/0007002/720121gk.htm
The Chemical Educator, Vol. 7, No. 2, S1430-4171(02)02550-5, 10.1007/s00897020550a, © 2002 Springer-Verlag New York, Inc.
Rosalyn Yalow, Nobel Laureate: Her Life and Work in Medicine. By Eugene Straus, M.D. Plenum Trade: New York, 1998; hardbound, out of print; ISBN 0-306-45796-2; Perseus Press Cambridge, MA, 2000; paperbound. $16.00. Illustrations. xv + 277 pp. 16.0 23.5 cm. George B. Kauffman and Laurie M. Kauffman, California State University, Fresno, georgek@csufresno. edu On December 10, 1977, in Stockholm’s Konserthus (Concert Hall), Sweden’s King Carl XVI Gustav awarded one half of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine to Rosalyn Yalow of the Veterans Administration Hospital, Bronx, New York “for the development of radioimmunoassays [RIA] of peptide hormones.” He presented the other half to Roger Guillemin of the Salk Institute, La Jolla, CA and Andrew V. Schally of the Veterans Administration Hospital, New Orleans, LA, both of whom used RIA extensively, “for their discoveries concerning the peptide hormone production of the brain.” Yalow was the second woman to receive this honor (Gerty Therese Cori and her husband Carl Ferdinand Cori had received half of the prize in 1947 “for their discovery of the course of the catalytic conversion of glycogen”), but she was the first American-educated woman to win the prize. Eugene Straus, M.D., a gastroenterologist, Professor of Medicine and Chief of Digestive Diseases at the State University of New York Health Science Center in Brooklyn, and Yalow’s longtime friend and colleague, begins his “biographical memoir” with her sudden stroke on January 1, 1995, when she was taken to a hospital, where, soiled with blood and unrecognized, she was “dumped” as a charity case onto another hospital. He then contrasts her slow and ultimate recovery from her crippling illness with her earlier, productive years that he chronicles in empathic but objective detail based on his own contact with her and extensive interviews with family and colleagues.

14. Rosalyn Yalow: Assaying The Unknown
them. Suggested reading Straus, E. rosalyn yalow, nobel Laureate HerLife and Work in Medicine; Perseus Books Cambridge, MA, 1998.
http://pubs.acs.org/subscribe/journals/mdd/v04/i09/html/09timeline.html
September 2001
Table of Contents
MDD Home Subscription Info Electronic Reader Service ... RICHARD A. PIZZI Rosalyn Yalow: Assaying the unknown This pioneering woman physicist received a Nobel Prize for her work in the development of the radioimmunoassay. THE NATIONAL LIBRARY OF MEDICINE Rosalyn Yalow (she had married a fellow student, Aaron Yalow, in 1941) accepted a position as an engineer at the Federal Telecommunications Laboratory, and then in 1946 a full-time teaching position at her alma mater, Hunter College. During her graduate training in Illinois under the renowned nuclear physicist Maurice Goldhaber, Yalow became proficient in the construction and use of apparatus for the measurement of radioactive substances, a skill that would prove critical in her later research. In 1947, while still on the faculty at Hunter, Yalow became a consultant in nuclear physics at the Veterans Administration (VA) Hospital in the Bronx, where the staff was conducting research on medical applications of radioactive materials. The VA decided to establish Radioisotope Services in several of its hospitals nationwide. Yalow helped develop the service at the Bronx VA and started research projects with Bernard Roswit, chief of radiotherapy services. Expanding these measuring techniques to the study of globins and other serum proteins, Yalow and Berson were determined to apply their methods to one of the most important classes of small peptides: hormones. According to Yalow, they chose insulin as a subject of research because it was the hormone most readily available in a purified form and was easier to work with in the laboratory than other hormones. But Yalow had a familial reason to be interested in insulin, as her husband, Aaron, was diabetic. Among the endocrine gland disorders, diabetes affects the greatest number of people, making insulin uniquely important. Without insulin and its ability to lower blood sugar, death is inevitable.

15. Rosalyn Sussman Yalow
rosalyn Sussman yalow. (1921 ). A medical physicist and a nobel Laureate, rosalynSussman was born July 19, 1921 in Bronx, New York, USA Although her parents
http://www.distinguishedwomen.com/biographies/yalow.html
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Rosalyn Sussman Yalow
From 1946 to 1950, she taught physics at Hunter College and in 1947, she also became a consultant in nuclear physics at the Veterans Administration Hospital in the Bronx, where they were conducting research on medical applications of radioactive materials. In 1950, she left Hunter College and became an assistant head of the radioisotope service at the hospital. She began a long-lasting partnership with Dr. Solomon A. Berson and together they used radioactive isotopes to investigate physiological systems. They created a new analytic technique called the radioimmunoassay, or the RIA, which allowed quantifying very small amounts of biological substances in body fluids using radioactive-labeled material. They made it possible for doctors to diagnose conditions caused by minute changes in hormone levels. In 1959 they used RIA to show that adult diabetics did not always suffer insufficiency of insulin in their blood and that some unknown factor must be blocking the action of insulin. They also showed that the injected insulin obtained from animals was being inactivated by the patients' immune systems. RIA was then used by other investigators to screen blood for hepatitis virus in blood banks, to determine effective dosage levels of drugs and antibiotics, to detect foreign substances in the blood, to treat dwarfed children with growth hormones, to test and correct hormone levels in infertile couples, and in many other fields. RIA made endocrinology one of the hottest fields in medical research.

16. Yalow, Rosalyn Sussman. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001
yalow, rosalyn Sussman. For her work, yalow was awarded the 1977 nobel Prize in Physiologyor Medicine along with Andrew V. Schally and Roger Guillemin.
http://www.bartleby.com/65/ya/Yalow-Ro.html
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17. 65807. Yalow, Rosalyn. The Columbia World Of Quotations. 1996
ATTRIBUTION rosalyn yalow (b. 1921), US chemist; nobel Laureate inmedicine and physiology (1977). From a speech given to students
http://www.bartleby.com/66/7/65807.html
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18. Yalow
rosalyn Sussman yalow is a Jewish medical physicist and a nobel Prizewinner. rosalyn yalow Winner of the 1977 nobel Prize in Medicine.
http://www.qerhs.k12.nf.ca/projects/physics/yalow.html
Rosalyn Sussman Yalow
Rosalyn Sussman Yalow is a Jewish medical physicist and a Nobel Prize winner. She was born July 19, 1921 in Bronx, New York, USA. She graduated with honors in Physics and Chemistry from Hunter College in New York, New York, in 1941. She then recieved a teaching assistance-ship in physics at the University of Illinois, and in 1945, recieved her Ph.D in nuclear physics. There she met and married A. Aaron Yalow, who was also a physics student at the university. In 1946 she left the university of Illinois and taught physics at Hunter College until 1950. Also, in 1947 she became a consultant in nuclear physics at the Veterans Administration Hospital, where she studied medical applications of radioactive materials. This is where she met Dr. Soloman A. Berson. Rosalyn was a research professor at Mt. Sinai School of Medicine from 1968 to 1974, a service professor from 1974 to 1979, and was elected to the National Academy of Sciences in 1975. In 1976, she was the first woman to be awarded the Albert Lasker Prize for medical research. Then in 1977, she shared the Nobel Prize in medicine “for the development of radioimmunoassays of peptide hormones.” Rosalyn Sussman Yalow retired from the Veterans Administration Hospital in 1991. She is using her time, as a Nobel Prize winner, to try and get better science education, better child care and other causes. She is still alive and living in New York today.

19. Rosalyn Yalow Nobel Laureate Her Life Work Medicine: Books: Find The Lowest Pric
rosalyn yalow nobel Laureate Her Life Work Medicine Compare newand used books prices among 62 book stores in a click. Searches
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