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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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Radiofrequency Catheter Ablation of a Left Posterior Accessory Atrioventricular Connection in a Patient with the Wolff–Parkinson–White Syndrome
TL;DR: From top to bottom the tracings represent the surface electrocardiogram (Lead V1) and bipolar intracardiac electrograms recorded from the high right atrium (HRA) and right ventricular apex (RVA) during right atrial pacing.
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Noncardiac surgery ≤ 2 y after coronary stent placement was linked to perioperative MI and all-cause mortality
Shashank S. Sinha,Kim A. Eagle +1 more
TL;DR: Noncardiac surgery 2 years after coronary stent placement was linked to myocardial infarction and all-cause mortality, but not revascularization, which supports the understanding of the relative contributions of cardiac and surgical factors to perioperative adverse cardiac events.
Journal Article
Abstract 3430: Ethnic Differences in the Prevalence and Treatment of Cardiovascular Risk Factors in Outpatients with Peripheral Arterial Disease: Insights from the REACH Registry
Telly A. Meadows,Deepak L. Bhatt,Alan T. Hirsch,Mark A. Creager,Robert M. Califf,Erik Magnus Ohman,Christopher P. Cannon,Kim A. Eagle,Mark J. Alberts,Shinya Goto,Peter W.F. Wilson,Ph. Gabriel Steg +11 more
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Coronary artery bypass surgery, hospital volume, and risk.
TL;DR: The authors concluded that a policy of targeted regionalization is unlikely to be of value in coronary artery bypass surgery (CABG), but if one scrutinizes their results, the study by Goodney and colleagues re-confirms one of their key findings; that hospital volume has an important and consistent effect on patients with predicted operative risk.
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Shock and acute aortic dissection: A dangerous liaison
TL;DR: The analyses demonstrated an attenuating impact of shock on mortality over time, with survival rates similar to those of patients without in-hospital shock after 6 months to 1 year postdischarge, and the stable mortality rates in this cohort support additional investigation into management of patients with this complicated condition.