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Arthur J. Moss

Researcher at University of Rochester Medical Center

Publications -  681
Citations -  79063

Arthur J. Moss is an academic researcher from University of Rochester Medical Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Heart failure & Cardiac resynchronization therapy. The author has an hindex of 107, co-authored 681 publications receiving 74898 citations. Previous affiliations of Arthur J. Moss include Rochester General Health System & Bikur Cholim Hospital.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Marked reduction in long-term cardiac deaths with aspirin after a coronary event

TL;DR: The findings suggest that current practice leads to situations in which aspirin exerts a long-term, life-protecting action, particularly after thrombolysis, which is substantially greater than that reported previously.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Cubic Spline Baseline Estimation In Ambulatory ECg Recordings For The Measurement Of ST Segment Displacements

TL;DR: In this work, the isoelectric line of the ECG signal is estimated by interpolating consecutive isoelectedric points with third order lines by means of cubic spline interpolation, allowing the development of a reliable beat-by-beat ST segment displacement signal.
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Long-Term Pervenous Atrial Pacing From the Proximal Portion of the Coronary Vein

TL;DR: Long-term left atrial pacing was successfully accomplished in three patients by positioning permanently implanted pervenous pacemaker catheters in the proximal portion of the coronary vein by documenting the configuration of the P waves on the electrocardiogram.
Journal ArticleDOI

Permanent Pervenous Atrial Pacing From the Coronary Vein Long-Term Follow-Up

TL;DR: This report details the clinical experience during a 12 to 63 month follow-up period in 30 patients with permanent pervenous atrial pacemakers implanted in the coronary vein prior to May 1972, including indications for permanent atrial pacing.
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Effects of implantable cardioverter/defibrillator shock and antitachycardia pacing on anxiety and quality of life: A MADIT-RIT substudy

TL;DR: In MADIT‐RIT, ≥2 appropriate or inappropriate ICD shocks and ≥2appropriate ATPs are associated with more anxiety at 9‐month follow‐up despite no significant changes in the assessment of global QoL by the EQ‐5D questionnaire.