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Mary J. Roman

Researcher at Cornell University

Publications -  371
Citations -  51574

Mary J. Roman is an academic researcher from Cornell University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Blood pressure & Population. The author has an hindex of 100, co-authored 365 publications receiving 48687 citations. Previous affiliations of Mary J. Roman include University of Maryland, Baltimore & NewYork–Presbyterian Hospital.

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Mitral Ratio of Peak Early to Late Diastolic Filling Velocity as a Predictor of Mortality in Middle-Aged and Elderly Adults The Strong Heart Study

TL;DR: In a population-based sample of middle-aged and elderly adults, mitral E/A >1.5 at baseline Doppler echocardiography is associated with 2-fold increased all-cause and 3-fold increase cardiac mortality independent of covariates.
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Relation of obesity and gender to left ventricular hypertrophy in normotensive and hypertensive adults.

TL;DR: Left ventricular mass/height identified hypertrophy in 52% of obese and 30% of normal-weight hypertensive patients and was independent of blood pressure values in obese normotensive women (but not men), and the prevalence of supranormal left ventricularmass/height 2.7 was even higher in hypertensive obese women (58%) than men.
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Association of aortic dilation with regurgitant, stenotic and functionally normal bicuspid aortic valves.

TL;DR: There is a high prevalence of aortic root enlargement in patients with a bicuspid aorti valve that occurs irrespective of altered hemodynamics or age, and these findings support the hypothesis that bic Suspid aORTic valve and aortIC root dilation may reflect a common developmental defect.
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Parallel cardiac and vascular adaptation in hypertension.

TL;DR: The present study documents the presence of geometric and functional changes within the common carotid artery in uncomplicated hypertension that parallel findings within the left ventricle.
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Electrocardiographic identification of increased left ventricular mass by simple voltage-duration products

TL;DR: QRS duration is an independent ECG predictor of the presence of left ventricular hypertrophy, and the simple product of either Cornell voltage or 12-lead voltage and QRS duration significantly improves identification ofleft ventricularhypertrophy relative to other ECG criteria that use QRSduration and voltages in linear combinations.