J
Joseph Loscalzo
Researcher at Brigham and Women's Hospital
Publications - 875
Citations - 79338
Joseph Loscalzo is an academic researcher from Brigham and Women's Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Nitric oxide & Platelet. The author has an hindex of 129, co-authored 828 publications receiving 71573 citations. Previous affiliations of Joseph Loscalzo include Veterans Health Administration & University of California, Los Angeles.
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Salivary gland extracts from the deerfly contain a potent inhibitor of platelet aggregation
TL;DR: The active component in deerfly salivary gland extract appears to be a protein that is comparatively more potent than the disintegrins present in viper venoms, and isolation and characterization of this protein may provide different directions in therapeutics and studies of normal platelet physiology.
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Temporal effects of thrombolytic agents on platelet function in vivo and their modulation by prostaglandins.
TL;DR: The data suggest that the effects of thrombolytic agents on platelet function are complex and can be modulated by antiplatelet prostaglandins.
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Complexity and network dynamics in physiological adaptation: an integrated view.
TL;DR: Analysis of molecular and cellular mechanisms of adaptation in response to the pervasive challenge of obesity, a chronic condition resulting from sustained nutrient excess that prompts chaotic exploration for system stability associated with tradeoffs and a risk of adverse outcomes, holds the promise of gaining novel insights into physiological adaptation in health and disease.
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Polymorphisms in Catechol-O-Methyltransferase Modify Treatment Effects of Aspirin on Risk of Cardiovascular Disease
Kathryn T. Hall,Christopher P. Nelson,Roger B. Davis,Julie E. Buring,Irving Kirsch,Murray A. Mittleman,Joseph Loscalzo,Nilesh J. Samani,Paul M. Ridker,Ted J. Kaptchuk,Daniel I. Chasman +10 more
TL;DR: Common COMT polymorphisms were associated with incident CVD, and this association was modified by randomized allocation to aspirin or vitamin E.
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Temporal bias in case-control design: preventing reliable predictions of the future
William Yuan,Brett K. Beaulieu-Jones,Kun-Hsing Yu,Scott Lipnick,Nathan Palmer,Joseph Loscalzo,Tianxi Cai,Tianxi Cai,Isaac S. Kohane +8 more
TL;DR: Temporal bias acts to undermine the validity of predictions by over-emphasizing features close to the outcome of interest as discussed by the authors, leading to exaggerated effect sizes, false negative predictions, and replication failure.