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Luciano A. Sposato

Researcher at University of Western Ontario

Publications -  187
Citations -  73617

Luciano A. Sposato is an academic researcher from University of Western Ontario. The author has contributed to research in topics: Stroke & Atrial fibrillation. The author has an hindex of 49, co-authored 161 publications receiving 56573 citations. Previous affiliations of Luciano A. Sposato include Spanish National Research Council & Diego Portales University.

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Post-Stroke Cardiovascular Complications and Neurogenic Cardiac Injury: JACC State-of-the-Art Review

TL;DR: Recent advances in the understanding of anatomical and functional aspects of the brain-heart axis, cardiovascular complications after stroke, and a comprehensive pathophysiological model of stroke-induced cardiac injury are described.

Global, regional, and national disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) for 306 diseases and injuries and healthy life expectancy (HALE) for 188 countries, 1990–2013: Quantifying the epidemiological transition

Christopher J L Murray, +611 more
TL;DR: The Global Burden of Disease Study 2013 (GBD 2013) aims to bring together all available epidemiological data using a coherent measurement framework, standardised estimation methods, and transparent data sources to enable comparisons of health loss over time and across causes, age-sex groups, and countries as discussed by the authors.
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Reproducibility and variability of quantitative magnetic resonance imaging markers in cerebral small vessel disease

TL;DR: This review focuses on the main small vessel disease-related markers on magnetic resonance imaging including: white matter hyperintensities, lacunes, dilated perivascular spaces, microbleeds, and brain volume.
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METACOHORTS for the study of vascular disease and its contribution to cognitive decline and neurodegeneration: An initiative of the Joint Programme for Neurodegenerative Disease Research

TL;DR: The enthusiastic response means that cohorts from North America, Australasia, and the Asia Pacific Region are included, creating a truly global, collaborative, data sharing platform, linked to major national dementia initiatives.