E
Edward D. Nicol
Researcher at National Institutes of Health
Publications - 187
Citations - 3053
Edward D. Nicol is an academic researcher from National Institutes of Health. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Coronary artery disease. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 147 publications receiving 1943 citations. Previous affiliations of Edward D. Nicol include Imperial College London & Healthcare Commission.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Coronary Artery Plaque Characteristics Associated With Adverse Outcomes in the SCOT-HEART Study
Michelle C. Williams,Michelle C. Williams,Alastair J Moss,Marc R. Dweck,Philip D Adamson,Shirjel Alam,Amanda Hunter,Anoop S V Shah,Tania A. Pawade,Jonathan R. Weir-McCall,Giles Roditi,Edwin J.R. van Beek,David E. Newby,Edward D. Nicol +13 more
TL;DR: Adverse coronary plaque characteristics and overall calcified plaque burden confer an increased risk of coronary heart disease death or nonfatal myocardial infarction.
Journal ArticleDOI
Low-Attenuation Noncalcified Plaque on Coronary Computed Tomography Angiography Predicts Myocardial Infarction: Results From the Multicenter SCOT-HEART Trial (Scottish Computed Tomography of the HEART).
Michelle C. Williams,Jacek Kwiecinski,Mhairi K. Doris,Priscilla McElhinney,Michelle S. D’Souza,Sebastien Cadet,Philip D Adamson,Philip D Adamson,Alastair J Moss,Shirjel Alam,Amanda Hunter,Anoop S V Shah,Nicholas L. Mills,Tania Pawade,Chengjia Wang,Jonathan R. Weir McCall,Michael Bonnici-Mallia,Christopher Murrills,Giles Roditi,Edwin J R van Beek,Leslee J. Shaw,Edward D. Nicol,Daniel S. Berman,Piotr J. Slomka,David E. Newby,Marc R. Dweck,Damini Dey +26 more
TL;DR: In patients presenting with stable chest pain, low-attenuation plaque burden is the strongest predictor of fatal or nonfatal myocardial infarction, challenging the current perception of the supremacy of current classical risk predictors for myocardials.
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The Updated NICE Guidelines: Cardiac CT as the First-Line Test for Coronary Artery Disease.
TL;DR: Cardiac CT is recommended as the first-line test for the evaluation of stable coronary artery disease in chest pain pathways by NICE, and randomised controlled trials have demonstrated that cardiac CT improves diagnostic certainty when incorporated intochest pain pathways.
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Echocardiography in the critically ill: current and potential roles
TL;DR: The applications of echocardiography in the critical care setting (excluding standard peri-operative echOCardiography for cardiac surgery) are reviewed, with particular emphasis on the assessment of cardiac physiology.
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Computed Tomography Imaging in Patients with Congenital Heart Disease, Part 2: Technical Recommendations. An Expert Consensus Document of the Society of Cardiovascular Computed Tomography (SCCT):Endorsed by the Society of Pediatric Radiology (SPR) and the North American Society of Cardiac Imaging (NASCI)
B. Kelly Han,Cynthia K. Rigsby,Anthony M. Hlavacek,Jonathon Leipsic,Edward D. Nicol,Marilyn J. Siegel,Dianna M. E. Bardo,Suhny Abbara,Brian B. Ghoshhajra,John R. Lesser,Subha V. Raman,Andrew M. Crean +11 more
TL;DR: In this paper, an expert consensus document was created to provide information about the current use of cardiovascular computed tomography (CT) in patients of all ages with proven or suspected congenital heart disease (CHD) The discussion and recommendations are based on available literature and the judgment of a diverse group of subspecialists with extensive experience in the use of CT imaging in CHD.