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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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Stroke Volume/Pulse Pressure Ratio and Cardiovascular Risk in Arterial Hypertension

TL;DR: In patients with arterial hypertension, a reduced ratio of M-mode echocardiographic SV/PP as a percentage of the value predicted by demographic variables is a predictor of cardiovascular morbid events independent of age and LV mass index.
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Prediction of Indications for Valve Replacement Among Asymptomatic or Minimally Symptomatic Patients With Chronic Aortic Regurgitation and Normal Left Ventricular Performance

TL;DR: Currently accepted symptom and LV performance indications for valve replacement, as well as sudden cardiac death, can be predicted in asymptomatic/minimally symptomatic patients with AR by load-adjusted deltaLVEF-deltaESS index, which includes data obtained during exercise.
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Impact of Arterial Stiffening on Left Ventricular Structure

TL;DR: Pressure-dependent methods show an association with left ventricular hypertrophy, whereas the pressure-independent stiffness index, &bgr;, and the arterial compliance index are most strongly associated with aging andleft ventricular concentric remodeling but nothypertrophy.
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Association of carotid atherosclerosis and left ventricular hypertrophy

TL;DR: The present study provides the first evidence that higher left ventricular mass as detected by echocardiography is associated with the presence of carotid plaque, which may contribute to the pathogenesis of the high incidence of vascular events that is well documented in patients withleft ventricular hypertrophy.
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Relations of Left Ventricular Mass to Fat-Free and Adipose Body Mass The Strong Heart Study

TL;DR: LV mass is more strongly related to FFM than to adipose mass, waist/hip ratio, body mass index, or height-based surrogates for lean body weight; LV mass/FFM criteria may increase sensitivity to detect LV hypertrophy.