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Jacqui Robinson

Researcher at Royal Prince Alfred Hospital

Publications -  22
Citations -  7972

Jacqui Robinson is an academic researcher from Royal Prince Alfred Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Endothelial dysfunction & Brachial artery. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 21 publications receiving 7731 citations. Previous affiliations of Jacqui Robinson include Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation & The Heart Research Institute.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Cigarette smoking is associated with dose-related and potentially reversible impairment of endothelium-dependent dilation in healthy young adults.

TL;DR: Cigarette smoking is associated with dose-related and potentially reversible impairment of endothelium-dependent arterial dilation in asymptomatic young adults, consistent with endothelial dysfunction.
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Aging is associated with endothelial dysfunction in healthy men years before the age-related decline in women

TL;DR: Age-related decline in vascular health is associated with progressive endothelial dysfunction in normal humans, and this appears to occur earlier in men than in women, but in women a steep decline commences at around the time of the menopause, consistent with a protective effect of estrogens on the arterial wall.
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Endothelium-dependent dilation in the systemic arteries of asymptomatic subjects relates to coronary risk factors and their interaction☆

TL;DR: Loss of endothelium-dependent dilation in the systemic arteries occurs in the preclinical phase of vascular disease and is associated with interaction of the same risk factors known to predispose to atherosclerosis and its complications in later life.
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Passive Smoking and Impaired Endothelium-Dependent Arterial Dilatation in Healthy Young Adults

TL;DR: Passive smoking is associated with dose-related impairment of endothelium-dependent dilatation in healthy young adults, suggesting early arterial damage.
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Non-invasive measurement of human endothelium dependent arterial responses: accuracy and reproducibility.

TL;DR: Vascular responses to endothelium dependent and independent stimuli in systemic arteries can be studied non-invasively in man, and it is calculated that for individuals, an improvement in flow mediated dilatation of 4-8% is significantly greater than natural variability.