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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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Abciximab (ReoPro) potentiates thrombolysis in ST elevation myocardial infarction: results of TIMI 14 trials
Elliot M Antman,RP Giugliano,Carolyn H. McCabe,Michael F. Gibson,A.J.J. Adgey,Magdi Ghali,P Coussement,Keaven M. Anderson,Joel C Scherer,F. Van de Werf,Eugene Braunwald +10 more
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Redefining medical treatment in the management of unstable angina.
Eugene Braunwald,Robert M. Califf,Christopher P. Cannon,Keith A.A. Fox,Valentin Fuster,W. Brian Gibler,RA Harrington,Spencer B. King,Neil S. Kleiman,Pierre Théroux,Eric J. Topol,Frans Van de Werf,Harvey D. White,James T. Willerson +13 more
TL;DR: Consideration should be given to measuring serum levels of a cardiac troponin (either T or I) and using intravenous GP IIb-IIIa inhibitors and low-molecular-weight heparin in the standard management of patients with unstable angina.
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Left Ventricular Function Following Replacement of the Aortic Valve Hemodynamic Responses to Muscular Exercise
TL;DR: While the cardiac output response was adequate to meet the stress of exercise in the majority of the patients studied following aortic valve replacement, determination of the relationship between the left ventricular end-diastolic pressure and the stroke volume permitted the detection of abnormalities in the function of theleft ventricle.
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Ventricular performance in rats with myocardial infarction and failure.
TL;DR: A progressive impairment in ventricular performance and an increase in chamber volume occurred in relation to infarct size in rats with healed myocardial infarction.
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On analyzing scientific fraud.
TL;DR: Braunwald, a professor at Harvard Medical School, responds to a paper by Stewart and Feder as discussed by the authors concerning their findings of errors, discrepancies, and other lapses in publications coauthored by John Darsee, a biomedical researcher in Braunwald's laboratory who was found guilty of fraud, and by colleagues of Darsee's at the Harvard and Emory University medical schools.