E
Eugene Braunwald
Researcher at Brigham and Women's Hospital
Publications - 1758
Citations - 278949
Eugene Braunwald is an academic researcher from Brigham and Women's Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Myocardial infarction & TIMI. The author has an hindex of 230, co-authored 1711 publications receiving 264576 citations. Previous affiliations of Eugene Braunwald include Boston University & University of California, San Francisco.
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Left Heart Catheterization by the Transbronchial Route: Technic and Applications in Physiologic and Diagnostic Investigations
TL;DR: Left heart catheterization is proving of increasing importance in the study of a variety of congenital and acquired cardiovascular defects and its usefulness in clinical investigation and in the assessment of valvular heart disease is described.
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Editorial Hypertrophic Subaortic Stenosis—A Broadened Concept
TL;DR: Detailed analyses of the clinical and laboratory findings in patients with this disorder revealed a clinical picture that, in many patients, revealed diffuse hypertrophy of the left ventricle and particular prominence of the septal musculature, which was found to bulge into and attenuate theleft ventricular outflow tract.
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Use of an ultra short-acting beta-blocker in patients with acute myocardial ischemia.
TL;DR: Esmolol is a new ultra short-acting (half-life [t1/2] beta 9 min) beta 1-adrenergic-receptor antagonist reported to have no intrinsic sympathomimetic activity and there was no significant change in the pulmonary capillary wedge pressure, respiratory rate, or PR interval during the maintenance phase.
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The effect of propranolol on microvascular injury in acute myocardial ischemia.
TL;DR: The results suggest that propranolol not only protects the isChemic myocardial cell, but also significantly decreases the ischemic microvascular changes.
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Angiographic and clinical outcomes among patients with acute coronary syndromes presenting with isolated anterior ST-segment depression: a TRITON-TIMI 38 (Trial to Assess Improvement in Therapeutic Outcomes by Optimizing Platelet Inhibition With Prasugrel-Thrombolysis In Myocardial Infarction 38) substudy.
Yuri B. Pride,Patricia Tung,Satishkumar Mohanavelu,Cafer Zorkun,Stephen D. Wiviott,Elliott M. Antman,Robert P. Giugliano,Eugene Braunwald,C. Michael Gibson +8 more
TL;DR: Among ACS patients presenting with isolated anterior ST-segment depression, over one-quarter had an occluded culprit artery and elevated cardiac biomarkers, and these patients had significantly worse clinical outcomes, and few underwent urgent angiography.