C
Christopher H. Morrell
Researcher at National Institutes of Health
Publications - 117
Citations - 6764
Christopher H. Morrell is an academic researcher from National Institutes of Health. The author has contributed to research in topics: Arterial stiffness & Longitudinal study. The author has an hindex of 36, co-authored 103 publications receiving 6088 citations. Previous affiliations of Christopher H. Morrell include Loyola University Chicago & Johns Hopkins University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Accelerated Longitudinal Decline of Aerobic Capacity in Healthy Older Adults
Jerome L. Fleg,Christopher H. Morrell,Christopher H. Morrell,Angelo Jose Goncalves Bos,Larry J. Brant,Laura A. Talbot,Jeanette G. Wright,Edward G. Lakatta +7 more
TL;DR: The longitudinal rate of decline in peak &OV0312;o2 in healthy adults is not constant across the age span in healthy persons, as assumed by cross-sectional studies, but accelerates markedly with each successive age decade, especially in men, regardless of physical activity habits.
Journal ArticleDOI
Gender differences in a longitudinal study of age-associated hearing loss
Jay D. Pearson,Christopher H. Morrell,Sandra Gordon-Salant,Larry J. Brant,E. Jeffrey Metter,Lisa L. Klein,James L. Fozard +6 more
TL;DR: Results from the largest and longest longitudinal study reported to date of changes in pure-tone hearing thresholds in men and women screened for otological disorders and noise-induced hearing loss show gender differences in hearing levels and show that age-associated hearing loss occurs even in a group with relatively low-noise occupations.
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Longitudinal Trajectories of Arterial Stiffness and the Role of Blood Pressure The Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging
Majd AlGhatrif,James B. Strait,Christopher H. Morrell,Marco Canepa,Jeanette G. Wright,Palchamy Elango,Angelo Scuteri,Samer S. Najjar,Luigi Ferrucci,Edward G. Lakatta +9 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors collected 2 to 9 serial measures of PWV in 354 men and 423 women of the Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging, who were 21 to 94 years of age and free of clinically significant cardiovascular disease.
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The metabolic syndrome in older individuals: Prevalence and prediction of cardiovascular events: The cardiovascular health study
TL;DR: Investigating the prevalence of the metabolic syndrome in a subgroup of older participants from the Cardiovascular Health Study who were free of CVD at baseline found that it is approximately 21-28% (depending on the definition used), and the two sets of criteria have 80% concordance in classifying subjects.
Journal ArticleDOI
Large-scale cDNA analysis reveals phased gene expression patterns during preimplantation mouse development
Minoru S.H. Ko,John R. Kitchen,Xiaohong Wang,Tracy A. Threat,A. Hasegawa,T. Sun,Marija J. Grahovac,Marija J. Grahovac,George J. Kargul,George J. Kargul,Meng K. Lim,Meng K. Lim,Yushun Cui,Yuri Sano,Tetsuya S. Tanaka,Y. Liang,S. Mason,P.D. Paonessa,A.D. Sauls,G.E. DePalma,R. Sharara,Lucy B. Rowe,Janan Eppig,Christopher H. Morrell,Hirofumi Doi +24 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the 3'-ESTs were derived from each stage from egg to blastocyst, and 9718 genes, half of them novel, were found to be dedicated to embryonic expression, leading to the possibility that development is driven by a series of stage-specific expressed genes.