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Aleš Linhart

Researcher at First Faculty of Medicine, Charles University in Prague

Publications -  371
Citations -  36568

Aleš Linhart is an academic researcher from First Faculty of Medicine, Charles University in Prague. The author has contributed to research in topics: Fabry disease & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 50, co-authored 333 publications receiving 30467 citations. Previous affiliations of Aleš Linhart include University Hospital of Wales & Charles University in Prague.

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Early and subacute inflammatory response and long-term survival after hip trauma and surgery.

TL;DR: The survival of elderly patients undergoing the surgery for acute hip fracture is unfavorable and it is not confirmed that acute inflammatory response to the surgery predicts the long-term survival, but persistent elevation of WBC and IL-6 three weeks after the surgery indicates a poor outcome.
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Long-term prognostic impact of hyponatremia in the ST-elevation myocardial infarction.

TL;DR: Patients who developed hyponatremia in the early phase of STEMI were at higher risk of worse in-hospital clinical outcome and the multiple analysis of variance identified decrease of S-Na levels at admission independently associated with total mortality.
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Hemodynamic instability after pulmonary endarterectomy for chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension correlates with cytokine network hyperstimulation

TL;DR: Hemodynamic instability after PEA has been associated with higher postoperative plasma concentrations of IL-6 and IL-8, which is in accordance with the hypothesis that cytokine activation may be among the neurohumoral factors responsible for cardiodepression and systemic vasoplegia in CTEPH patients undergoing PEA.
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ECG in patients with acute heart failure can predict in-hospital and long-term mortality.

TL;DR: In this paper, the impact of multiple ECG parameters on mortality in acute heart failure patients was evaluated, and the most important parameters were a prolonged QRS and a junctional rhythm, which independently predict both in-hospital mortality and long-term mortality.