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Jelena Marinkovic

Researcher at University of Belgrade

Publications -  322
Citations -  5882

Jelena Marinkovic is an academic researcher from University of Belgrade. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Myocardial infarction. The author has an hindex of 37, co-authored 301 publications receiving 5218 citations. Previous affiliations of Jelena Marinkovic include Cardiovascular Institute of the South & Cleveland Clinic.

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Reliability of the Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression: A meta-analysis over a period of 49 years

TL;DR: Figures indicate good overall levels of internal consistency, inter-rater and test-retest reliability, but some HRSD items do not appear to possess a satisfactory reliability.
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Early changes in left ventricular function in chronic asymptomatic alcoholics: relation to the duration of heavy drinking ☆

TL;DR: Left ventricular dilation with preserved EF and impaired LV relaxation characterized LV function in chronic asymptomatic alcoholic patients, and it appeared that the progression of abnormalities in LV diastolic filling related to the duration of alcoholism.
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Risk factors for Toxoplasma infection in a reproductive age female population in the area of Belgrade, Yugoslavia

TL;DR: In the absence of a general screening in pregnancy program in Yugoslavia, data point out the groups of pregnant women at the highest risk of infection and provide a basis for a region-appropriate educational program to prevent congenital toxoplasmosis.
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Immediate Versus Delayed Invasive Intervention for Non-STEMI Patients: The RIDDLE-NSTEMI Study

TL;DR: Immediate invasive strategy in NSTEMI patients is associated with lower rates of death or new MI compared with the delayed invasive strategy at early and midterm follow-up, mainly due to a decrease in the risk of new MI in the pre-catheterization period.
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The burden of disease and injury in Serbia

TL;DR: The final results of the study have shown that the national health priority areas should cover cardiovascular diseases, cancers, and mental health.