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Author(s):
Robert C Hendel
Added:
3 years ago
Heart disease, specifically coronary artery disease (CAD), is the leading cause of death and disability among both men and women in the US. Reductions in blood supply due to narrowings of the arteries that supply the heart muscle with oxygen and nutrients (coronary arteries) result in chest pain and shortness of breath and may lead to permanent scarring of the heart muscle, as in the setting of a…
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Author(s):
Robert C Hendel
Added:
3 years ago
Background
Heart disease, specifically coronary artery disease (CAD), is the leading cause of death and disability among both men and women in the US. Reductions in blood supply due to narrowings of the arteries that supply the heart muscle with oxygen and nutrients (coronary arteries) result in chest pain and shortness of breath and may lead to permanent scarring of the heart muscle, as in the…
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Author(s):
Andrew SP Sharp
,
Indranil Dasgupta
,
Felix Mahfoud
,
et al
Start date:
Dec 07, 2018
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Author(s):
Joo-Yong Hahn
Added:
1 year ago
ACC.23/WCC - Principal investigator, Dr Joo-Yong Hahn (Samsung Medical Center, KR) joins us to discuss the findings of the RENOVATE-COMPLEX-PCI late-breaking trial (Samsung Medical Center). The investigators compared clinical outcomes between intravascular imaging guided (IVUS) versus angiography guided (OCT) percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) in 1639 patients with complex lesions …
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Author(s):
Rhian E Davies
,
J Dawn Abbott
Added:
3 years ago
Percutaneous Coronary Intervention for Clinical Syndromes
Stable Angina
The primary benefit of percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) over medical therapy in patients with stable angina is the improved quality of life. The PCI in stable angina (ORBITA) trial was the first sham-controlled trial of PCI where 200 medically optimized patients with single vessel disease were randomized to PCI or…
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Author(s):
Sahar S Abdelmoneim
,
Sharon L Mulvagh
Added:
3 years ago
Several advances in the field of echocardiography have led to improvements in the accuracy of stress echocardiography (SE) and further strengthened its established diagnostic and prognostic role in patients with known or suspected coronary artery disease (CAD). 1,2 In addition to its role in CAD, SE can be used to assess the severity of valvular heart disease and for detection of occult pulmonary…
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Author(s):
Nils Perrin
,
Anita W Asgar
Added:
2 years ago
Author(s):
Dimitrios Bliagos
,
Ajay J Kirtane
,
Jeffrey W Moses
Added:
3 years ago
Worldwide, it is estimated that the total number of people with diabetes will increase from 171 million in 2000 to 366 million in 2030.1 In the US, a total of 23.6 million people have diabetes, representing 7.8% of the population, and the prevalence of diabetes is on the rise, due to an increasingly sedentary lifestyle, increasing obesity and an ageing population. These statistics do not account…
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Author(s):
Robert C Hendel
Added:
3 years ago
Heart disease, specifically coronary artery disease (CAD), is the leading cause of death and disability among both men and women in the US. Reductions in blood supply due to narrowings of the arteries that supply the heart muscle with oxygen and nutrients (coronary arteries) result in chest pain and shortness of breath and may lead to permanent scarring of the heart muscle, as in the setting of a…
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Author(s):
Karthiek R Narala
,
Thomas A LaLonde
,
Sohail Hassan
,
et al
Added:
3 years ago
Chronic kidney disease (CKD) affects approximately 26 million people in the US.1 CKD is considered a coronary risk equivalent and also a risk factor for progression of cardiovascular disease (CVD).2 Cardiovascular death rates are 10–30 times higher in dialysis patients than in the general population.3 This increase in CKD patients is multifactorial and is now mainly considered via two pathways:…
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