J
Jin Li Zhang
Publications - 5
Citations - 1567
Jin Li Zhang is an academic researcher. The author has contributed to research in topics: Blood pressure & Randomized controlled trial. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 4 publications receiving 1481 citations.
Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
Intensive blood pressure reduction in acute cerebral haemorrhage trial (INTERACT): a randomised pilot trial.
Craig S. Anderson,Yining Huang,Jiguang Wang,Hisatomi Arima,Hisatomi Arima,Bruce Neal,Bin Peng,Bin Peng,Emma Heeley,Christian Skulina,Mark W Parsons,Jong S. Kim,Qing Ling Tao,Yue Chun Li,Jian Dong Jiang,Li Wen Tai,Jin Li Zhang,En Xu,Yan Cheng,Stephane Heritier,Lewis B. Morgenstern,John Chalmers +21 more
TL;DR: Early intensive lowering of elevated blood pressure (BP) after acute intracerebral haemorrhage (ICH) was evaluated in this article, as a run-in phase to a larger trial.
Intensive blood pressure reduction in acute cerebralhaemorrhage trial (INTERACT): a randomised pilot trial
Craig S. Anderson,Hisatomi Arima,John Chalmers,Emma Heeley,Stephane Heritier,Bruce Neal,Bin Peng,Christian Skulina,Yan Cheng,Yining Huang,Jiang Dong Jiang,Sung Kim Jong,Wen Tai Li,Lewis B. Morgenstern,Mark W Parsons,Qing Ling Tao,Jiguang Wang,En Xu,Jin Li Zhang +18 more
TL;DR: Early intensive BP-lowering treatment is clinically feasible, well tolerated, and seems to reduce haematoma growth in ICH, a large randomised trial needed to define the effects on clinical outcomes across a broad range of patients with ICH.
Journal ArticleDOI
Effects of Early Intensive Blood Pressure-Lowering Treatment on the Growth of Hematoma and Perihematomal Edema in Acute Intracerebral Hemorrhage: The Intensive Blood Pressure Reduction in Acute Cerebral Haemorrhage Trial (INTERACT)
Craig S. Anderson,Yining Huang,Hisatomi Arima,Emma Heeley,Christian Skulina,Mark W Parsons,Bin Peng,Qiang Li,Steve Su,Qing Ling Tao,Yue Chun Li,Jian Dong Jiang,Li Wen Tai,Jin Li Zhang,En Xu,Yan Cheng,Lewis B. Morgenstern,John Chalmers,Ji-Guang Wang +18 more
TL;DR: The Intensive Blood Pressure Reduction In Acute Cerebral Haemorrhage Trial (INTERACT) as mentioned in this paper suggests that early intensive blood pressure lowering can attenuate hematoma growth at 24 hours after intracerebral hemorrhage.
Journal ArticleDOI
Lower Treatment Blood Pressure Is Associated With Greatest Reduction in Hematoma Growth After Acute Intracerebral Hemorrhage
Hisatomi Arima,Craig S. Anderson,Ji-Guang Wang,Yining Huang,Emma Heeley,Bruce Neal,Mark Woodward,Christian Skulina,Mark W Parsons,Bin Peng,Qing Ling Tao,Yue Chun Li,Jian Dong Jiang,Li Wen Tai,Jin Li Zhang,En Xu,Yan Cheng,Lewis B. Morgenstern,John Chalmers +18 more
TL;DR: Intensive BP reduction to systolic levels between 130 and 140 mm Hg is likely to provide the maximum protection against hematoma growth after intracerebral hemorrhage.