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Jeffrey E. Olgin

Researcher at University of California, San Francisco

Publications -  274
Citations -  14238

Jeffrey E. Olgin is an academic researcher from University of California, San Francisco. The author has contributed to research in topics: Atrial fibrillation & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 62, co-authored 236 publications receiving 11644 citations. Previous affiliations of Jeffrey E. Olgin include Indiana University & Indiana University – Purdue University Indianapolis.

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Worldwide Effect of COVID-19 on Physical Activity: A Descriptive Study.

TL;DR: Author(s): Tison, Geoffrey H; Avram, Robert; Kuhar, Peter; Abreau, Sean; Marcus, Greg M; Pletcher, Mark J; Olgin, Jeffrey E.
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Increased Vulnerability to Atrial Fibrillation in Transgenic Mice With Selective Atrial Fibrosis Caused by Overexpression of TGF-β1

TL;DR: In this transgenic mouse model, selective atrial fibrosis is sufficient to increase AF inducibility, and action potential characteristics recorded with intracellular microelectrodes did not reveal differences between Wt and Tx mice in either atrium.
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Role of right atrial endocardial structures as barriers to conduction during human type I atrial flutter. Activation and entrainment mapping guided by intracardiac echocardiography.

TL;DR: In this article, activation and entrainment mapping, guided by intracardiac echocardiography (ICE), was used to determine whether the crista terminalis (CT) and eustachian ridge (ER) are barriers to conduction during typical atrial flutter in humans.
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Ablation of ‘Incisional’ Reentrant Atrial Tachycardia Complicating Surgery for Congenital Heart Disease Use of Entrainment to Define a Critical Isthmus of Conduction

TL;DR: The hypotheses that intra-atrial reentrant tachycardia in patients who had undergone prior reparative surgery for congenital heart disease could be successfully ablated by targeting a protected isthmus of conduction bounded by natural and surgically created barriers are tested and entrainment techniques could be used to identify these zones.