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Kim A. Eagle
Researcher at University of Michigan
Publications - 852
Citations - 85694
Kim A. Eagle is an academic researcher from University of Michigan. The author has contributed to research in topics: Aortic dissection & Myocardial infarction. The author has an hindex of 129, co-authored 823 publications receiving 75160 citations. Previous affiliations of Kim A. Eagle include University of Wisconsin Hospital and Clinics & Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Management of acute type A aortic dissection in the elderly: an analysis from IRAD.
Jonathan M. Hemli,Stevan S. Pupovac,Thomas G. Gleason,Thoralf M. Sundt,Nimesh D. Desai,Davide Pacini,Maral Ouzounian,Jehangir J. Appoo,Daniel G. Montgomery,Kim A. Eagle,Takeyoshi Ota,Marco Di Eusanio,Anthony L. Estrera,Joseph S. Coselli,Himanshu J. Patel,Santi Trimarchi,Derek R. Brinster +16 more
TL;DR: When compared with septuagenarians, a smaller percentage of octogenarians undergo surgical repair for TAAAD, even though postoperative outcomes are similar, suggesting age alone should not preclude consideration for surgery in appropriately selected patients with TAAad.
Journal ArticleDOI
Aortic dissection related to pregnancy: the international registry of acute aortic dissection (irad)
Eric Mittauer,Kevin M. Harris,Arturo Evangelista-Masip,Reed E. Pyeritz,Derek R. Brinster,Lori D. Conklin,Toru Suzuki,Christina L. Fanola,Maral Ouzounian,Edward P. Chen,Truls Myrmel,Raffi Bekeredijan,Stuart Hutchison,Joseph S. Coselli,Dan Gilon,Patrick T. O'Gara,Melinda B. Davis,Eric M. Isselbacher,Kim A. Eagle,Alan C. Braverman +19 more
TL;DR: This study enrolled women with pregnancy-related AoD enrolled in IRAD from 1998 to 2019 and found that women with underlying aortopathy are at increased risk of acute aortic dissection.
Journal ArticleDOI
Gender Differences in Acute Aortic Dissection
TL;DR: It is shown that in type A AAD, women more often experience pleural effusion and coronary artery compromise, but experience less neurological and malperfusion symptoms, and no significant differences were shown for in-hospital mortality between the two genders.
Journal ArticleDOI
Influence of family history of aortic disease on type b aortic dissection
Sherene Shalhub,Sherene Shalhub,Maral Ouzounian,Maral Ouzounian,Eduardo Bossone,Eduardo Bossone,Kevin M. Harris,Kevin M. Harris,Patrick T. O'Gara,Patrick T. O'Gara,Anil Bhan,Anil Bhan,Patroklos Pappas,Patroklos Pappas,Anthony W. DiScipio,Anthony W. DiScipio,Clayton A. Kaiser,Clayton A. Kaiser,Edward Chen,Edward Chen,Christoph A. Nienaber,Christoph A. Nienaber,Daniel G. Montgomery,Daniel G. Montgomery,Eric M. Isselbacher,Eric M. Isselbacher,Kim A. Eagle,Kim A. Eagle,Mark E. Lindsay,Mark E. Lindsay,Arturo Evangelista,Arturo Evangelista +31 more
TL;DR: Patients with Type B acute aortic dissection with and without a family history of aorta disease are described to compare the prevalence of FH between Type A and TBAAD and the genetic basis of thoracic aortal disease is well established.
Journal ArticleDOI
Survival after operative repair of acute type A aortic dissection varies according to the presence and type of preoperative malperfusion.
Stanley B. Wolfe,Thoralf M. Sundt,Eric M. Isselbacher,Duke E. Cameron,Santi Trimarchi,Raffi Bekeredjian,Bradley G. Leshnower,Joseph E. Bavaria,Derek R. Brinster,Ibrahim Sultan,Chih-Wen Pai,Puja Kachroo,Maral Ouzounian,Joseph S. Coselli,Truls Myrmel,Davide Pacini,Kim A. Eagle,Himanshu J. Patel,Arminder S. Jassar +18 more
TL;DR: The International Registry of Acute Aortic Dissection database was queried for patients who underwent surgical repair of acute type A aortic dissection (TAAD) as mentioned in this paper .