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Eamon Dolan

Researcher at Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland

Publications -  99
Citations -  10540

Eamon Dolan is an academic researcher from Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland. The author has contributed to research in topics: Blood pressure & Ambulatory blood pressure. The author has an hindex of 34, co-authored 88 publications receiving 9036 citations. Previous affiliations of Eamon Dolan include Jagiellonian University & Memorial Hospital of South Bend.

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Prognostic significance of visit-to-visit variability, maximum systolic blood pressure, and episodic hypertension.

TL;DR: Visit-to-visit variability in systolic blood pressure (SBP) and maximum SBP are strong predictors of stroke, independent of mean SBP.
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European Society of Hypertension Position Paper on Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitoring

TL;DR: The historical background, the advantages and limitations of ABPM, the threshold levels for practice, and the cost-effectiveness of the technique are considered, while the role ofABPM in research circumstances, such as pharmacological trials and in the prediction of outcome in epidemiological studies is examined.
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Superiority of Ambulatory Over Clinic Blood Pressure Measurement in Predicting Mortality The Dublin Outcome Study

TL;DR: Results have 2 important clinical messages: ambulatory measurement of blood pressure is superior to clinic measurement in predicting cardiovascular mortality, and nighttimeBlood pressure is the most potent predictor of outcome.
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European Society of Hypertension practice guidelines for ambulatory blood pressure monitoring.

TL;DR: The requirements and the methodological issues to be addressed for using ABPM in clinical practice are addressed, the clinical indications for ABPM suggested by the available studies are outlined in detail, and the place of home measurement of blood pressure in relation to ABPM is discussed.
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Effects of β blockers and calcium-channel blockers on within-individual variability in blood pressure and risk of stroke

TL;DR: The opposite effects of calcium-channel blockers and beta blockers on variability of blood pressure account for the disparity in observed effects on risk of stroke and expected effects based on mean blood pressure.