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Martin A. James

Researcher at Royal Devon and Exeter Hospital

Publications -  49
Citations -  1804

Martin A. James is an academic researcher from Royal Devon and Exeter Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Blood pressure & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 37 publications receiving 1652 citations. Previous affiliations of Martin A. James include University of Leicester & Leicester Royal Infirmary.

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Acupuncture for subacute stroke rehabilitation: a Sham-controlled, subject- and assessor-blind, randomized trial.

TL;DR: Acupuncture is not superior to sham treatment for recovery in activities of daily living and health-related quality of life after stroke, although there may be a limited effect on leg function in more severely affected patients.
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Does the use of Nintendo Wii SportsTM improve arm function? Trial of WiiTM in Stroke: A randomized controlled trial and economics analysis

TL;DR: The trial showed that the WiiTM was not superior to arm exercises in home-based rehabilitation for stroke survivors with arm weakness and was well tolerated but more expensive than arm exercises.
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Assessment of baroreceptor-cardiac reflex sensitivity using time domain analysis in patients with IDDM and the relation to left ventricular mass index.

TL;DR: Time domain analysis of baroreceptor-cardiac reflex sensitivity detects autonomic dysfunction more frequently in insulin-dependent diabetic patients than conventional tests.
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Effects of Aging and Hypertension on the Microcirculation

TL;DR: The findings with both in vivo and in vitro methods suggest that normotensive aging may depend on relative preservation of NO-dependent vasodilatation in resistance arteries at the expense of a rise in capillary pressure.
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Evidence of defective cardiovascular regulation in insulin-dependent diabetic patients without clinical autonomic dysfunction

TL;DR: Spectral analysis of cardiovascular variability detects autonomic dysfunction more frequently in Type 1 DM patients than conventional tests, and is suggestive of an abnormality of parasympathetic function.