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Edgar A. Hines

Researcher at University of Minnesota

Publications -  17
Citations -  1056

Edgar A. Hines is an academic researcher from University of Minnesota. The author has contributed to research in topics: Raynaud's disease & Blood pressure. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 17 publications receiving 1006 citations. Previous affiliations of Edgar A. Hines include Mayo Clinic.

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Arteriosclerosis Obliterans: Review of 520 Cases with Special Reference to Pathogenic and Prognostic Factors

TL;DR: The clinical and follow-up data on 520 non-diabetic patients less than 60 years of age who had a clinical diagnosis of arteriosclerosis obliterans of the lower extremities made at the Mayo Clinic in the period 1939 through 1948 were reviewed from the standpoint of pathogenesis, prognosis, and clinical course of the disease.
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Lipedema of the legs: a syndrome characterized by fat legs and edema

TL;DR: There is little in the literature on abnormal localized depositions of body fat to clarify the syndrome of lipedema of the legs, but two of us (E. V. and E. A. H.) described it in 1940.
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Raynaud's Disease Among Women and Girls

TL;DR: The diagnosis of Raynaud's disease was suspected in 756 female patients at the Mayo Clinic from 1920 through 1945 and substantiated from the records of the initial examination or from the follow-up data or examination in 474.
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Prognostic significance of Raynaud's phenomenon and other clinical characteristics of systemic scleroderma. A study of 271 cases.

TL;DR: Two hundred seventy-one patients with unequivocal systemic scleroderma for whom the diagnosis was first established at the Mayo Clinic between January 1, 1945, and December 31, 1952 have been studied, and the prognosis was found to be worse than previous reports had indicated.
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Bilateral Indirect and Direct Arterial Pressures

TL;DR: Bilateral differences in bilateral blood pressure were characterized by their inconstancy and lack of agreement with subsequent measurements when studied by both the indirect and direct methods, which apparently separates them from those due to altered hemodynamics from pathologic conditions of the aortic arch or its tributaries.