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James F. Silverman

Researcher at Stanford University

Publications -  44
Citations -  3394

James F. Silverman is an academic researcher from Stanford University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Angina & Myocardial infarction. The author has an hindex of 25, co-authored 44 publications receiving 3330 citations.

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Isolated single coronary artery: diagnosis, angiographic classification, and clinical significance.

TL;DR: Typical angina did not occur with single coronary artery in the absence of coexisting coronary artery disease or aortic stenosis, and a new classification is proposed, according to the site of origin and anatomical distribution of the branches.
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Accelerated coronary vascular disease in the heart transplant patient: coronary arteriographic findings.

TL;DR: Cor coronary artery disease in transplant patients represents a mixture of typical atheromatous lesions and unique transplant-related progressive distal obliterative disease that occurs without collateral vessel development.
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Unstable angina pectoris: National cooperative study group to compare surgical and medical therapy: II. In-Hospital experience and initial follow-up results in patients with one, two and three vessel disease

TL;DR: The results indicate that patients with unstable angina pectoris can be managed acutely with intensive medical therapy, including the administration of propranolol and long-acting nitrates in pharmacologic doses, with adequate control of pain in most patients and no increase in early mortality or myocardial infarction rates.
Journal Article

Clinical and laboratory correlates of accelerated coronary artery disease in the cardiac transplant patient.

TL;DR: It is concluded that TxCAD has limited correlation with the clinical and laboratory factors analyzed, and higher donor age and elevated plasma triglycerides may be significant predisposing factors for the development of TXCAD.
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Echocardiographic Abnormalities in the Mitral Valve Prolapse Syndrome

TL;DR: Since the echocardiographic abnormality is found in the absence of various parts of the syndrome, it may be used as a tool to diagnose the mitral valve prolapse syndrome, discover its incidence and follow its natural history.