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James A. Ronan

Researcher at Georgetown University

Publications -  20
Citations -  599

James A. Ronan is an academic researcher from Georgetown University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Myocardial infarction & Heart rate. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 20 publications receiving 589 citations. Previous affiliations of James A. Ronan include National Institutes of Health.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Radiographic appearance of the thorax in systolic click-late systolic murmur syndrome.

TL;DR: Thoracic cage abnormalities should be included as one of the nonauscultatory features of the systolic click-late systolics murmur syndrome.
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Effects of nadolol on the spontaneous and exercise-provoked heart rate of patients with chronic atrial fibrillation receiving stable dosages of digoxin.

TL;DR: It is concluded that nadolol is a safe and effective agent for the control of spontaneous and exercise-provoked heart rates in patients with chronic atrial fibrillation who were already receiving digoxin treatment.
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Systolic clicks and the late systolic murmur; intracardiac phonocardiographic evidence of their mitral valve origin.

TL;DR: Observation of the clicks and murmur to the infusion of pressor amine and to the inhalation of amyl nitrite adds further weight to the concept of their origin at the mitral orifice and confirms and extends previous information relating the late systolic Murmur to organic mitral incompetence even if the murmur is accompanied by systolics clicks.
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The clinical diagnosis of acute severe mitral insufficiency.

TL;DR: The clinical and hemodynamic data of 8 patients with acute severe mitral insufficiency are presented and it is shown that the basic pathology lies in the suspensory apparatus of the valve rather than in the leaflets.
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Ventricular septal defect with the "two-chambered right ventricle".

TL;DR: Clinical, hemodynamic, angiocardiographic and postmortem data are described in a patient who not only had ventricular septal defect with a “two-chambered right ventricle”, but in whom shunt operations apparently permitted survival after complete closure of the pathway connecting the two chambers.