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H. Hochrein

Researcher at Free University of Berlin

Publications -  18
Citations -  311

H. Hochrein is an academic researcher from Free University of Berlin. The author has contributed to research in topics: Diastole & Isovolumetric contraction. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 18 publications receiving 306 citations.

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Immediate physiological responses of healthy volunteers to different types of music: cardiovascular, hormonal and mental changes

TL;DR: It would seem to be possible to detect cardiovascular changes following different types of music by Doppler ultrasound and hormone analysis, meditative music having promising therapeutic implications in the treatment of conditions of stress.
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Noninvasive measurement of left ventricular filling pressures by means of transmitral pulsed Doppler ultrasound.

TL;DR: In 54 consecutive patients, ages 59 +/- 11 years, the transmitral diastolic flow velocity profile was derived by means of pulsed Doppler echocardiography simultaneously with right-sided heart catheterization simultaneously with left-sidedHeart catheterized in 30 of them.
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Changes of diastolic function induced by cigarette smoking: an echocardiographic study in patients with coronary artery disease.

TL;DR: In cigarette smokers with coronary artery disease acute administration of nicotine hence causes a shift of mitral blood flow from early (E wave) to late (A wave) diastole and a prolongation of the isovolumetric relaxation time.
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[Stress reduction through listening to music: effects on stress hormones, hemodynamics and mental state in patients with arterial hypertension and in healthy persons].

TL;DR: Stress hormones, tissue-plasminogen activator (t-PA) antigen, left-ventricular diastolic function and mood immediately before and after listening to three different kinds of music were measured to recognise haemodynamic effects.
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Noninvasive assessment by pulsed doppler ultrasound of left ventricular filling behavior in long distance runners during marathon race

TL;DR: Pulsed Doppler echocardiography of mitral flow has been shown to be a reliable method of assessing LV diastolic filling in healthy athletes and pathologic 9–11 states and this method has been validated compared with both cineangiographic 12 and radionuclide 13 techniques.