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Bernard De Bruyne

Researcher at Eindhoven University of Technology

Publications -  465
Citations -  43780

Bernard De Bruyne is an academic researcher from Eindhoven University of Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Fractional flow reserve & Coronary artery disease. The author has an hindex of 88, co-authored 399 publications receiving 38144 citations.

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Fractional flow reserve versus angiography for guiding percutaneous coronary intervention

TL;DR: Routine measurement of FFR in patients with multivessel coronary artery disease who are undergoing PCI with drug-eluting stents significantly reduces the rate of the composite end point of death, nonfatal myocardial infarction, and repeat revascularization at 1 year.
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A Prospective Natural-History Study of Coronary Atherosclerosis

TL;DR: In patients who presented with an acute coronary syndrome and underwent percutaneous coronary intervention, major adverse cardiovascular events occurring during follow-up were equally attributable to recurrence at the site of culprit lesions and to nonculprit lesions.
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Fractional flow reserve-guided PCI versus medical therapy in stable coronary disease

TL;DR: In patients with stable coronary artery disease and functionally significant stenoses, FFR-guided PCI plus the best available medical therapy, as compared with the best Available medical therapy alone, decreased the need for urgent revascularization.
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Measurement of Fractional Flow Reserve to Assess the Functional Severity of Coronary-Artery Stenoses

TL;DR: In patients with coronary stenosis of moderate severity, FFR appears to be a useful index of the functional severity of the stenoses and the need for coronary revascularization.
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Percutaneous Coronary Intervention of Functionally Nonsignificant Stenosis: 5-Year Follow-Up of the DEFER Study

TL;DR: Five-year outcome after deferral of PCI of an intermediate coronary stenosis based on FFR >/=0.75 is excellent and the risk of cardiac death or myocardial infarction related to this stenosis is <1% per year and not decreased by stenting.