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Jonathan Beard

Researcher at Northern General Hospital

Publications -  120
Citations -  7283

Jonathan Beard is an academic researcher from Northern General Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Angioplasty & Endarterectomy. The author has an hindex of 37, co-authored 120 publications receiving 6689 citations. Previous affiliations of Jonathan Beard include Royal Hallamshire Hospital & Tutor.com.

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Bypass versus angioplasty in severe ischaemia of the leg (BASIL): multicentre, randomised controlled trial.

TL;DR: In patients presenting with severe limb ischaemia due to infra-inguinal disease and who are suitable for surgery and angioplasty, a bypass-surgery-first and a balloon-angioplastic-first strategy are associated with broadly similar outcomes in terms of amputation-free survival, and in the short-term, surgery is more expensive than angiopLasty.
Journal ArticleDOI

Carotid artery stenting compared with endarterectomy in patients with symptomatic carotid stenosis (International Carotid Stenting Study): an interim analysis of a randomised controlled trial

Jörg Ederle, +351 more
- 20 Mar 2010 - 
TL;DR: Completion of long-term follow-up is needed to establish the efficacy of carotid artery stenting compared with endarterectomy, but in the meantime, carotin artery stent should remain the treatment of choice for patients suitable for surgery.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bypass versus angioplasty in severe ischaemia of the leg (BASIL): Multicentre, randomised, controlled trial

TL;DR: In patients presenting with severe limb ischaemia due to infra-inguinal disease and who are suitable for surgery and angioplasty, a bypass-surgery-first and a balloon-angioplastic-first strategy are associated with broadly similar outcomes in terms of amputation-free survival, and in the short-term, surgery is more expensive than angiopLasty.
Journal ArticleDOI

Long-term risk of carotid restenosis in patients randomly assigned to endovascular treatment or endarterectomy in the Carotid and Vertebral Artery Transluminal Angioplasty Study (CAVATAS): long-term follow-up of a randomised trial

TL;DR: Restenosis is about three times more common after endovascular treatment than after endarterectomy and is associated with recurrent ipsilateral cerebrovascular symptoms; however, the risk of recurrent embedding stroke is low and further data are required to ascertain whether long-term ultrasound follow-up is necessary after carotid revascularisation.