Dr. Mark L Batshaw MD
Pediatrician | Developmental ? Behavioral Pediatrics
111 Michigan Ave NW Washington DC, 20010About
Dr. Mark Batshaw is a pediatrician practicing in Washington, DC. Dr. Batshaw is a doctor who specializes in the health care of children. As a pedicatrician, Dr. Batshaw diagnoses and treats infections, injuries, diseases and other disorders in children. Pediatricians typically work with infants, children, teenagers and young adults up to age 21. They practice medical care as well as preventative health care. Dr. Batshaw can oversee and manage the physical, mental and emotional health of their patients.
Education and Training
Univ of Chicago, Pritzker Sch of Med, Chicago Il 1971
University of Chicago Division of the Biological Sciences The Pritzker School of Medicine 1971
Board Certification
PediatricsAmerican Board of PediatricsABP- Neurodevelopmental Disabilities
Provider Details
Expert Publications
Data provided by the National Library of Medicine- Recombinant adenovirus gene transfer in adults with partial ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency (OTCD).
- Correction of ureagenesis after gene transfer in an animal model and after liver transplantation in humans with ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency.
- Transient depletion of CD4 lymphocyte improves efficacy of repeated administration of recombinant adenovirus in the ornithine transcarbamylase deficient sparse fur mouse.
- Correction of argininosuccinate synthetase (AS) deficiency in a murine model of citrullinemia with recombinant adenovirus carrying human AS cDNA.
- Alternative pathway therapy for urea cycle disorders: twenty years later.
- Long-term gene transfer to mouse fetuses with recombinant adenovirus and adeno-associated virus (AAV) vectors.
- Prospects for prenatal gene therapy in disorders causing mental retardation.
- Differences in the human and mouse amino-terminal leader peptides of ornithine transcarbamylase affect mitochondrial import and efficacy of adenoviral vectors.
- A pilot study of in vivo liver-directed gene transfer with an adenoviral vector in partial ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency.
- Hyperpipecolic acidemia associated with hepatomegaly, mental retardation, optic nerve dysplasia and progressive neurological disease.
- Humoral immune response to recombinant adenovirus and adeno-associated virus after in utero administration of viral vectors in mice.
- Brain development and the ontogeny of developmental disabilities.
- Quinolinate in brain and cerebrospinal fluid in rat models of congenital hyperammonemia.
- Fatal systemic inflammatory response syndrome in a ornithine transcarbamylase deficient patient following adenoviral gene transfer.
- Metabolic and neuropsychological phenotype in women heterozygous for ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency.
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