J
Jackson T. Wright
Researcher at Case Western Reserve University
Publications - 154
Citations - 80954
Jackson T. Wright is an academic researcher from Case Western Reserve University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Blood pressure & Kidney disease. The author has an hindex of 60, co-authored 139 publications receiving 73320 citations. Previous affiliations of Jackson T. Wright include Charles R. Drew University of Medicine and Science & Cornell University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Baseline characteristics of African Americans in the Systolic Blood Pressure Intervention Trial
Carolyn H Still,Timothy E. Craven,Barry I. Freedman,Peter N. Van Buren,Kaycee M. Sink,Anthony A. Killeen,Jeffrey T. Bates,Alberta Bee,Gabriel Contreras,Suzanne Oparil,Carolyn M. Pedley,Barry M. Wall,Suzanne White,Delia M. Woods,Carlos J. Rodriguez,Jackson T. Wright +15 more
TL;DR: Multivariate logistic regression analysis found BP control rates to <140/90 mm Hg were higher for AAs who were male, had higher number of chronic diseases, were on diuretic treatment, and had better medication adherence.
Journal ArticleDOI
APOL1 renal-risk variants associate with reduced cerebral white matter lesion volume and increased gray matter volume
Barry I. Freedman,Crystal A. Gadegbeku,R. Nick Bryan,Nicholette D. Palmer,Pamela J. Hicks,Lijun Ma,Michael V. Rocco,S. Carrie Smith,Jianzhao Xu,Christopher T. Whitlow,Benjamin C. Wagner,Carl D. Langefeld,Amret T. Hawfield,Jeffrey T. Bates,Alan J. Lerner,Dominic S. Raj,Mohammad Salehi Sadaghiani,Robert D. Toto,Jackson T. Wright,Donald W. Bowden,Jeff D. Williamson,Kaycee M. Sink,Joseph A. Maldjian,Joseph A. Maldjian,Nicholas M. Pajewski,Jasmin Divers +25 more
TL;DR: APOL1 renal-risk-variant effects on the brain are associated with larger gray matter volume and lower white matter lesion volume suggesting lower intracranial small vessel disease.
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The Benefits of Detecting and Treating Mild Hypertension: What We Know, and What We Need to Learn
TL;DR: The results are consistent with those of prior analyses in hypertension clinical outcome trials that showed that blood pressure reductions, even within this lower range, are associated with favorable cardiovascular outcomes and a recent guideline that recommended relaxing blood pressure goals in patients older than 60 years.
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Racial/Ethnic Differences in Left Ventricular Structure and Function in Chronic Kidney Disease: The Chronic Renal Insufficiency Cohort.
Faraz S. Ahmad,Xuan Cai,Katherine Kunkel,Ana C. Ricardo,James P. Lash,Dominic S. Raj,Jiang He,Amanda H. Anderson,Matthew J. Budoff,Julie A. Wright Nunes,Jason Roy,Jackson T. Wright,Alan S. Go,Alan S. Go,Alan S. Go,Martin St. John Sutton,John W. Kusek,Tamara Isakova,Myles Wolf,Martin G. Keane,Lawrence J. Appel,Harold I. Feldman,Akinlolu O. Ojo,Mahboob Rahman,Raymond R. Townsend +24 more
TL;DR: In a large, diverse cohort with CKD, significant differences in left ventricular mass and hypertrophic morphology between non-Hispanic Blacks and Whites are found.
Journal ArticleDOI
Estimated GFR Variability and Risk of Cardiovascular Events and Mortality in SPRINT (Systolic Blood Pressure Intervention Trial)
Rakesh Malhotra,Ronit Katz,Vasantha Jotwani,Adhish Agarwal,Debbie L. Cohen,William C. Cushman,Areef Ishani,Anthony A. Killeen,Dalane W. Kitzman,Suzanne Oparil,Vasilios Papademetriou,Chirag R. Parikh,Kalani L. Raphael,Michael V. Rocco,Leonardo Tamariz,Paul K. Whelton,Jackson T. Wright,Michael G. Shlipak,Joachim H. Ix,Joachim H. Ix +19 more
TL;DR: In trial participants at high risk for CVD with hypertension, greater eGFR variability was independently associated with all-cause mortality but not CVD events.