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Beth A. Davison
Researcher at Durham University
Publications - 149
Citations - 7315
Beth A. Davison is an academic researcher from Durham University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Heart failure & Serelaxin. The author has an hindex of 43, co-authored 126 publications receiving 5952 citations. Previous affiliations of Beth A. Davison include French Institute of Health and Medical Research.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Serelaxin, recombinant human relaxin-2, for treatment of acute heart failure (RELAX-AHF): a randomised, placebo-controlled trial
John R. Teerlink,Gad Cotter,Beth A. Davison,G. Michael Felker,Gerasimos Filippatos,Barry H. Greenberg,Piotr Ponikowski,Elaine Unemori,Adriaan A. Voors,Kirkwood F. Adams,Maria Dorobantu,Liliana Grinfeld,Guillaume Jondeau,Alon Marmor,Josep Masip,Peter S. Pang,Karl Werdan,Sam L. Teichman,Angelo J. Trapani,Christopher Bush,Rajnish Saini,Christoph Schumacher,Thomas Severin,Marco Metra +23 more
TL;DR: Treatment of acute heart failure with serelaxin was associated with dyspnoea relief and improvement in other clinical outcomes, but had no effect on readmission to hospital.
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Effect of Serelaxin on Cardiac, Renal, and Hepatic Biomarkers in the Relaxin in Acute Heart Failure (RELAX-AHF) Development Program: Correlation With Outcomes
Marco Metra,Gad Cotter,Beth A. Davison,G. Michael Felker,Gerasimos Filippatos,Barry H. Greenberg,Piotr Ponikowski,Elaine Unemori,Adriaan A. Voors,Kirkwood F. Adams,Maria Dorobantu,Liliana Grinfeld,Guillaume Jondeau,Alon Marmor,Josep Masip,Peter S. Pang,Karl Werdan,Margaret F. Prescott,Christopher L. Edwards,Sam L. Teichman,Angelo J. Trapani,Christopher Bush,Rajnish Saini,Christoph Schumacher,Thomas Severin,John R. Teerlink,Relax-Ahf Investigators +26 more
TL;DR: Early administration of serelaxin was associated with a reduction of 180-day mortality, and this occurred with fewer signs of organ damage and more rapid relief of congestion during the first days after admission.
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The Causes, Treatment, and Outcome of Acute Heart Failure in 1006 Africans From 9 Countries Results of the Sub-Saharan Africa Survey of Heart Failure
Albertino Damasceno,Bongani M. Mayosi,Mahmoud U Sani,Okechukwu S Ogah,Charles Mondo,Dike B. Ojji,Anastase Dzudie,Charles Kouam Kouam,Ahmed Suliman,Neshaad Schrueder,Gerald Yonga,Serigne Abdou Ba,Fikru Maru,Bekele Alemayehu,Christopher L. Edwards,Beth A. Davison,Gad Cotter,Karen Sliwa +17 more
TL;DR: In African patients, AHF has a predominantly nonischemic cause, most commonly hypertension, and the outcome is similar to that observed in non-African AHF registries, suggesting that AHf has a dire prognosis globally, regardless of the cause.
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Is Worsening Renal Function an Ominous Prognostic Sign in Patients With Acute Heart Failure? The Role of Congestion and Its Interaction With Renal Function
Marco Metra,Beth A. Davison,Luca Bettari,Hengrui Sun,Christopher L. Edwards,Valentina Lazzarini,Barbara Piovanelli,Valentina Carubelli,Silvia Bugatti,Carlo Lombardi,Gad Cotter,Livio Dei Cas +11 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors measured serum creatinine levels on a daily basis during the hospitalization and assessed the persistence of signs of congestion at discharge in 599 consecutive patients admitted at an institute for acute heart failure (AHF).
Journal ArticleDOI
Diuretic response in acute heart failure: clinical characteristics and prognostic significance
Mattia A.E. Valente,Adriaan A. Voors,Kevin Damman,Dirk J. van Veldhuisen,B.M. Massie,Christopher M. O'Connor,Marco Metra,Piotr Ponikowski,John R. Teerlink,Gad Cotter,Beth A. Davison,John G.F. Cleland,Michael M. Givertz,Daniel M. Bloomfield,Mona Fiuzat,Howard C. Dittrich,Hans L. Hillege +16 more
TL;DR: Worse diuretic response was associated with more advanced heart failure, renal impairment, diabetes, atherosclerotic disease and in-hospital worsening heart failure and predicts mortality and heart failure rehospitalization in this post hoc, hypothesis-generating study.