J
Jonathan W. Weinsaft
Researcher at Cornell University
Publications - 237
Citations - 7911
Jonathan W. Weinsaft is an academic researcher from Cornell University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Coronary artery disease & Internal medicine. The author has an hindex of 38, co-authored 210 publications receiving 6489 citations. Previous affiliations of Jonathan W. Weinsaft include Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center & Cedars-Sinai Medical Center.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Prognostic value of multidetector coronary computed tomographic angiography for prediction of all-cause mortality.
James K. Min,Leslee J. Shaw,Richard B. Devereux,Peter M. Okin,Jonathan W. Weinsaft,Donald J. Russo,Nicholas J. Lippolis,Daniel S. Berman,Tracy Q. Callister +8 more
TL;DR: In patients with chest pain, CCTA identifies increased risk for all-cause death and a negative C CTA portends an extremely low risk for death.
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Multimodality imaging of diseases of the thoracic aorta in adults: From the American society of echocardiography and the european association of cardiovascular imaging: Endorsed by the society of cardiovascular computed tomography and society for cardiovascular magnetic resonance
Steven A. Goldstein,Arturo Evangelista,Suhny Abbara,Andrew E. Arai,Federico M. Asch,Luigi P. Badano,Michael A. Bolen,Heidi M. Connolly,Hug Cuellar-Calabria,Martin Czerny,Richard B. Devereux,Raimund Erbel,Rossella Fattori,Eric M. Isselbacher,Joseph M. Lindsay,Marti L. McCulloch,Hector I. Michelena,Christoph A. Nienaber,Jae K. Oh,Mauro Pepi,Allen J. Taylor,Jonathan W. Weinsaft,José Luis Zamorano,Harry C. Dietz,Kim A. Eagle,John A. Elefteriades,Guillaume Jondeau,Hervé Rousseau,Marc A.A.M. Schepens +28 more
TL;DR: The aim of this work is to provide a common language for future generations to communicate effectively and effectively with one another about the importance of human rights and democracy.
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Improved detection of coronary artery disease by stress perfusion cardiovascular magnetic resonance with the use of delayed enhancement infarction imaging.
Igor Klem,Igor Klem,John F. Heitner,Dipan J. Shah,Michael H. Sketch,Victor S. Behar,Jonathan W. Weinsaft,Peter J. Cawley,Michele Parker,Michael D. Elliott,Robert M. Judd,Raymond J. Kim +11 more
TL;DR: A combined perfusion and infarction CMR examination with a visual interpretation algorithm can accurately diagnose CAD in the clinical setting and the combination is superior to perfusion-CMR alone.
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Assessment of myocardial scarring improves risk stratification in patients evaluated for cardiac defibrillator implantation
Igor Klem,Jonathan W. Weinsaft,Tristram D. Bahnson,Donald D. Hegland,Han W. Kim,Brenda Hayes,Michele Parker,Robert M. Judd,Raymond J. Kim +8 more
TL;DR: Myocardial scarring detected by cardiac MRI is an independent predictor of adverse outcome in patients being considered for ICD placement and identifies a high-risk cohort similar in risk to those with LVEF ≤30%.
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Detection of left ventricular thrombus by delayed-enhancement cardiovascular magnetic resonance prevalence and markers in patients with systolic dysfunction.
Jonathan W. Weinsaft,Han W. Kim,Dipan J. Shah,Igor Klem,Anna Lisa Crowley,Rhoda Brosnan,Olga James,Manesh R. Patel,John F. Heitner,Michele Parker,Eric J. Velazquez,Charles Steenbergen,Robert M. Judd,Raymond J. Kim +13 more
TL;DR: In a broad cross section of patients with systolic dysfunction, thrombus prevalence was 7% by DE-CMR and included small intracavitary and small or large muralThrombus missed by cine-C MR, and multivariable analysis showed that increased myocardial scarring was an independent risk factor for throm Bus.