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Alan Rozanski
Researcher at Mount Sinai St. Luke's and Mount Sinai Roosevelt
Publications - 274
Citations - 16363
Alan Rozanski is an academic researcher from Mount Sinai St. Luke's and Mount Sinai Roosevelt. The author has contributed to research in topics: Coronary artery disease & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 57, co-authored 237 publications receiving 15111 citations. Previous affiliations of Alan Rozanski include Saint Peter's University Hospital & Cedars-Sinai Medical Center.
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Journal ArticleDOI
The clinical impact of negative psychological states: expanding the spectrum of risk for coronary artery disease
TL;DR: Considering a broader spectrum of risk may help to understand more fully the mechanisms by which depression and other negative affective states influence coronary heart disease risk.
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Behavioral cardiology: current advances and future directions.
TL;DR: Four initiatives are proposed to meet the challenge of translating growing epidemiological evidence into cardiology practice, including promulgating greater awareness of the potency of psychosocial risks factors and overcoming a current "artificial divide" between conventional and Psychosocial risk factors.
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Sex differences in calcified plaque and long-term cardiovascular mortality: observations from the CAC Consortium.
Leslee J. Shaw,James K. Min,Khurram Nasir,Joe X. Xie,Daniel S. Berman,Michael D. Miedema,Seamus P. Whelton,Zeina Dardari,Alan Rozanski,John A. Rumberger,C. Noel Bairey Merz,Mouaz H. Al-Mallah,Matthew J. Budoff,Michael J. Blaha +13 more
TL;DR: The overall findings support that measures beyond the Agatston score provide important clues to sex differences in atherosclerotic plaque and may further refine risk detection and focus preventive strategies of care.
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The frequency of late reversibility in SPECT thallium-201 stress-redistribution studies.
Ling D. Yang,Daniel S. Berman,Hosen Kiat,Kenneth J. Resser,John D. Friedman,Alan Rozanski,Jamshid Maddahi +6 more
TL;DR: The frequency of thallium-201 late reversibility was prospectively assessed in 118 patients who had stress-redistribution thallum-201 studies by single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT), and the frequency of detected reversible defects increased from 27% at 4 h imaging to 43% at combined 4 h and late imaging.
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Metabolic Syndrome and Diabetes Are Associated With an Increased Likelihood of Inducible Myocardial Ischemia Among Patients With Subclinical Atherosclerosis
Nathan D. Wong,Alan Rozanski,Heidi Gransar,Romalisa Miranda-Peats,Xingping Kang,Sean W. Hayes,Leslee J. Shaw,John D. Friedman,Donna M. Polk,Daniel S. Berman +9 more
TL;DR: The findings suggest the need for assessment of metabolic status when interpreting the results of CAC imaging among patients undergoing such testing because of suspected CAD and predicted a higher likelihood of inducible ischemia.