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Gérard M. London

Researcher at French Institute of Health and Medical Research

Publications -  347
Citations -  38665

Gérard M. London is an academic researcher from French Institute of Health and Medical Research. The author has contributed to research in topics: Blood pressure & Population. The author has an hindex of 94, co-authored 344 publications receiving 35876 citations. Previous affiliations of Gérard M. London include Paris Descartes University & Indiana University.

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Impact of Aortic Stiffness on Survival in End-Stage Renal Disease

TL;DR: These results provide the first direct evidence that in patients with ESRD, increased aortic stiffness determined by measurement of aorta pulse-wave velocity is a strong independent predictor of all-cause and mainly cardiovascular mortality.
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Arterial media calcification in end-stage renal disease: impact on all-cause and cardiovascular mortality

TL;DR: AMC is a strong prognostic marker of all-cause and CV mortality in HD patients, independently of classical atherogenic factors and the principal effect of AMC on arterial function is increased arterial stiffness.
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Aortic Pulse Wave Velocity as a Marker of Cardiovascular Risk in Hypertensive Patients

TL;DR: This study shows that aortic PWV is strongly associated with the presence and extent of atherosclerosis and constitutes a forceful marker and predictor of cardiovascular risk in hypertensive patients.
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Determinants of pulse wave velocity in healthy people and in the presence of cardiovascular risk factors: 'establishing normal and reference values'.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors established reference and normal values for Carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity (PWV), a direct measure of aortic stiffness, based on a large European population.
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Arterial calcifications, arterial stiffness, and cardiovascular risk in end-stage renal disease.

TL;DR: The results of this study showed that the presence and extent of vascular calcifications were strong predictors of cardiovascular and all-cause mortality and carotid incremental elastic modulus gave additional predictive value.