D
Derek P. Chew
Researcher at Flinders University
Publications - 393
Citations - 21169
Derek P. Chew is an academic researcher from Flinders University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Myocardial infarction & Acute coronary syndrome. The author has an hindex of 60, co-authored 342 publications receiving 18879 citations. Previous affiliations of Derek P. Chew include Flinders Medical Centre & Auckland City Hospital.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Pre-hospital thrombolysis in ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction: a regional Australian experience
TL;DR: Although there is still some uncertainty about acceptable time delays to PCI, these data suggest that even more individuals should be receiving pre-hospital thrombolysis, and patients should be randomised in clinical trials that address the relative usefulness of these two reperfusion strategies.
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GP IIb/IIIa inhibitors in coronary artery disease management: What the latest trials tell us
Derek P. Chew,David J. Moliterno +1 more
TL;DR: These trials examined whether there are clinical differences between agents, whether empiric use of GP IIb/IIIa inhibitors in acute coronary syndromes is justified, and whether these drugs might allow for early invasive management in acute heart attacks.
Journal Article
Abstract 11996: Exposure to Evidence-Based Secondary Prevention After Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS) in Australia and New Zealand
Tom Briffa,Karice Hyun,Carolyn Astley,Clara K Chow,Bernadette Costa,Tegwen Howell,Bridie Carr,H. Parker,Isuru Ranasinghe,Karen Lintern,John K. French,Fiona Turnbull,Christopher J. Hammett,Chris Ellis,David Brieger,Derek P. Chew,Julie Redfern +16 more
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Stents and glycoprotein IIb/IIIa inhibitors do not improve 30-day outcome in bypass graft percutaneous interventions: a retrospective registry-based analysis
Marco Roffi,Albert W. Chan,Derek P. Chew,Mark Robbins,Debabrata Mukherjee,Deepak L. Bhatt,Abdulhay Albirini,Leslie Cho,Ramtin Agah,Eric J. Topol,Stephen G. Ellis +10 more
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Influence of metabolic syndrome on outcome after percutaneous coronary intervention
Vidyasagar Kalahasti,Derek P. Chew,Vijay Nambi,Stephen Minor,Ryan Zuzek,Stephen G. Ellis,Deepak L. Bhatt +6 more
TL;DR: The influence of metabolic syndrome on major adverse cardiac events (MACE) in PCI patients with BMS was studied and MetSyn factors showed a significant relationship to MACE.