Skip to main content

FACULTY OF 1000 MEDICINE

Log-in

Forgotten your password?

Athens users log in here

  • Home
  • Browse
  • Advanced Search
  • Subscribe
  • Free Trial
  • Hidden Jewels
  • About Us
  • Faculty Members
Take F1000 Medicine tour
Special Offer: just $9.99 for full access until the end of 2008. Subscribe!
F1000 Biology Search/Browse: See also our sister service comprising over 2400 Biology Experts
latest news

All the latest F1000M news

© Medicine Reports Ltd unless otherwise stated Terms and conditions
Legal info
Privacy policy
Contact us

  • Global faculty
    of experts
  • Each article interpreted and cross-indexed
  • Unique article ranking system
  • Saving you time
  • Service in detail
  • Tour of F1000 Medicine
  • Our blog
  • Contact

Kenneth White

MEDICINE, Indiana University School of Medicine, United States of America

Kenneth White photo

Any competing interests declared are displayed with individual evaluations.

Faculty Member: Nephrology > Mineral Metabolism & the Kidney (since 18 March 2008)

All recent recommendations

  • 3.0
    Klotho Ablation Converts the Biochemical and Skeletal Alterations in FGF23 (R176Q) Transgenic Mice to a Klotho Deficient Phenotype.
    Recommended by Kenneth White
  • 3.0
    FGFR3 and FGFR4 Do not Mediate Renal Effects of FGF23.
    Recommended by Kenneth White with Emily Farrow
  • 8.8
    Fibroblast growth factor 23 and mortality among patients undergoing hemodialysis.
    Recommended by Kamyar Kalantar-Zadeh, Jurg Schifferli with Michael Mayr, Kenneth White with Emily G Farrow, Bradley Dixon, Csaba Kovesdy, Alan Yu with Jeanie Park, David Salant with Laurence H Beck Jr, Markus Ketteler
  • 3.0
    Pathogenic Role of Fgf23 in Dmp1 Null Mice.
    Recommended by Kenneth White with Emily G Farrow
  • 3.0
    Anti-FGF23 Neutralizing Antibodies Demonstrate the Physiological Role and Structural Features of FGF23.
    Recommended by Kenneth White with Emily G Farrow
  • 4.8
    A translocation causing increased alpha-klotho level results in hypophosphatemic rickets and hyperparathyroidism.
    Recommended by Carsten Wagner, Kenneth White
About Us | Homepage | Back to Top