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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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Unilateral Cervicothoracic Sympathetic Ganglionectomy for the Treatment of Long QT Interval Syndrome
TL;DR: The syndrome of congenital deafness, syncopal episodes, long QT interval on the electrocardiogram and sudden death, and ventricular dysrhythmias have been well described.
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Electrocardiographic quantitation of ventricular repolarization.
TL;DR: A novel quantitative approach to improve the description of ventricular repolarization was applied to the digitized electrocardiograms of 423 normal subjects and conveys a new and more complete description of theRepolarization process and provides an electro Cardiac Repolarization database in normal subjects as a reference standard for identifying patients with disordered repolarized patients.
Journal Article
Guidelines for Management of Patients With Ventricular Arrhythmias and the Prevention of Sudden Cardiac Death.
Douglas P. Zipes,A. John Camm,Martin Borggrefe,Alfred E. Buxton,Bernard R. Chaitman,Martin Fromer,Gabriel Gregoratos,George J. Klein,Arthur J. Moss,Robert J. Myerburg,Silvia G. Priori,Miguel A. Quinones,Dan M. Roden,Michael J. Silka,Cynthia M. Tracy +14 more
TL;DR: Zipes et al. as mentioned in this paper proposed a task force to evaluate the effectiveness of MACC and FAHA, and the task force members proposed a MACC-FAHA-FESC framework.
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Increased Risk of Arrhythmic Events in Long-QT Syndrome With Mutations in the Pore Region of the Human Ether-a-go-go–Related Gene Potassium Channel
Arthur J. Moss,Wojciech Zareba,Elizabeth S. Kaufman,Eric J. Gartman,Derick R. Peterson,Jesaia Benhorin,Jeffrey A. Towbin,Mark T. Keating,Silvia G. Priori,Peter J. Schwartz,G. Michael Vincent,Jennifer L. Robinson,Mark L. Andrews,Changyong Feng,W. Jackson Hall,Aharon Medina,Li Zhang,Zhiqing Wang +17 more
TL;DR: Patients with mutations in the pore region of the HERG gene are at markedly increased risk for arrhythmia-related cardiac events compared with patients with nonpore mutations.
Journal Article
Living alone after myocardial infarction. Impact on prognosis
TL;DR: Living alone but not a disrupted marriage is an independent risk factor for prognosis after myocardial infarction when compared with all other known risk factors.