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Marcus Dörr

Researcher at Greifswald University Hospital

Publications -  398
Citations -  19265

Marcus Dörr is an academic researcher from Greifswald University Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 56, co-authored 335 publications receiving 13711 citations. Previous affiliations of Marcus Dörr include University of Greifswald & Boston University.

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Reach of Individuals at Risk for Cardiovascular Disease by Proactive Recruitment Strategies in General Practices, Job Centers, and Health Insurance.

TL;DR: Three proactive recruitment strategies regarding their reach of individuals with CVD risk factors were compared and the recruitment in general practices yielded the highest reach, but job centers may be useful to reduce health inequalities induced by social gradient.
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Cardiovascular risk factors and thoracic aortic wall thickness in a general population.

TL;DR: Established cardiovascular risk factors, including male sex, older age, smoking, high BMI, and high triglyceride levels, were associated with increasing thoracic AWT of the ascending and descending aorta.
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Long-term changes in body weight are associated with changes in blood pressure levels.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the associations of changes in body weight with changes in blood pressure and with incident hypertension, incident cardiovascular events, or incident normalization of blood pressure in patients who were hypertensive at baseline, over a 5-year period.
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Circulating Angiopoietin-2 and Its Soluble Receptor Tie-2 Concentrations Are Related to Renal Function in Two Population-Based Cohorts.

TL;DR: Serum Ang-2 concentrations are strongly associated with sensitive parameters of renal impairment like serum cystatin C, uACR and eGFR(cys).
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Impact of atrial fibrillation detected by extended monitoring-A population-based cohort study.

TL;DR: This study evaluated the detection of AF using transtelephonic electrocardiography and the clinical relevance of additional AF findings, especially with regard to stroke risk and mortality.