ClinPharm ClinPharm ClinPharm DOM Schulich UWO
Faculty

Stan Van Uum, MD,PhD
Dr. Stan Van Uum is an Assistant Professor in the divisions of Clinical Pharmacology and Endocrinology and Metabolism. He completed his undergraduate and graduate training in Internal Medicine in 1997, followed by a Fellowship in Endocrinology and Metabolism (2001), all at the University of Nijmegen in The Netherlands. He then completed his PhD in Medicine on the role of cortisol metabolism in hypertension (2003, University of Nijmegen, Supervisor: Dr. Jacques Lenders).
Between 2002 and summer 2003, he worked as an Internist at the Department of Medicine, Royal University Hospital, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon. In summer 2003, he joined the Department of Medicine at the University of Western Ontario.
Dr. Van Uum is interested in the role of hormones, particularly steroid hormones, in health and disease. These studies include consequences of drug-induced hypogonadism, and the measurement of steroid hormones in hair of the head, for which he has received funding from the Physician's Services Incorporation. Further, he is collaborating in studies on the effect of genetic variants in adenylyl cyclase on cardiovascular risk factors (including hypertension, obesity and metabolic control). His research activities are embedded within the Division of Clinical Pharmacology.
His clinical practice is located at St. Joseph's Health Centre and is focused on endocrinology, with a particular interest in pituitary and adrenal diseases, and secondary hypertension. Stan Van Uum is actively involved in teaching in relation to these areas.


Publications
 2000  2001  2002  2003  2004 
 <<<        >>> 


Monika Spurek, Regina Taylor-Gjevre, Stan Van Uum, Hasnain M. Khandwala Adrenomyeloneuropathy as a cause of primary adrenal insufficiency and spastic paraparesis: case report and discussion CMAJ 2004;171(9):1073-7  [Pubmed]
S.H.M. van Uum, J.W.M. Lenders and A.R.M.M. Hermus. Cortisol, 11b-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenases and hypertension. Seminars in Vascular Medicine 2004;4:121-8 [Pubmed]
S.H.M. van Uum, N. van Alfen, P. Wesseling, E. van Lindert, G.F.F.M. Pieters, P. Nooijen and A.R.M.M. Hermus. Massive reduction of tumor load and normalisation of hyperprolactinaemia after high-dose cabergoline in metastasized prolactinoma causing thoracic syringomyelia. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 2004;75:1489-91 [Pubmed]
Wael M.R. Haddara and S.H.M. van Uum, Tuberculosis and adrenal insufficiency, Letter, CMAJ 2004;171:710 [Pubmed]