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Andrew M. Taylor

Researcher at University College London

Publications -  353
Citations -  18056

Andrew M. Taylor is an academic researcher from University College London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Magnetic resonance imaging & Pulmonary valve. The author has an hindex of 61, co-authored 337 publications receiving 15985 citations. Previous affiliations of Andrew M. Taylor include Katholieke Universiteit Leuven & Great Ormond Street Hospital.

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Genetic variants in novel pathways influence blood pressure and cardiovascular disease risk

Georg Ehret, +391 more
- 06 Oct 2011 - 
TL;DR: A genetic risk score based on 29 genome-wide significant variants was associated with hypertension, left ventricular wall thickness, stroke and coronary artery disease, but not kidney disease or kidney function, and these findings suggest potential novel therapeutic pathways for cardiovascular disease prevention.
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Equilibrium Contrast Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance for the Measurement of Diffuse Myocardial Fibrosis Preliminary Validation in Humans

TL;DR: A robust and noninvasive technique, equilibrium contrast CMR (EQ–CMR), is developed and validated to measure diffuse myocardial fibrosis as an add-on to a standard CMR scan, which allows for the nonin invasive quantification of the diffuse fibrosis burden in myocardIAL diseases.
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Early mortality after hip fracture: is delay before surgery important?

TL;DR: Mortality was not increased when the surgery was delayed up to four days for patients who were otherwise fit for hip fracture surgery, however, a delay of more than four days significantly increased mortality.
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Percutaneous Pulmonary Valve Implantation in Humans Results in 59 Consecutive Patients

TL;DR: Percutaneous pulmonary valve implantation is feasible at low risk, with quantifiable improvement in MRI-defined ventricular parameters and pulmonary regurgitation, and results in subjective and objective improvement in exercise capacity.
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Percutaneous Pulmonary Valve Implantation Impact of Evolving Technology and Learning Curve on Clinical Outcome

TL;DR: Percutaneous pulmonary valve implantation resulted in the ability to avoid surgical right ventricular outflow tract revision in the majority of cases and might reduce the number of operations needed over the total lifetime of patients with right ventricle–to-pulmonary artery conduits.