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Michael A. Province

Researcher at Washington University in St. Louis

Publications -  409
Citations -  40871

Michael A. Province is an academic researcher from Washington University in St. Louis. The author has contributed to research in topics: Genome-wide association study & Population. The author has an hindex of 79, co-authored 396 publications receiving 37334 citations. Previous affiliations of Michael A. Province include Jewish Hospital & Harvard University.

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Leukocyte Telomere Length Is Unrelated to Cognitive Performance Among Non-Demented and Demented Persons: An Examination of Long Life Family Study Participants.

TL;DR: Within this unique LLFS cohort, a group of families assembled on the basis of exceptional survival, LTL is unrelated to cognitive ability for individuals with and without cognitive impairment, and LTL does not change in the context of degenerative disease for these individuals who are biologically younger than the general population.
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Genome-wide linkage analysis of carotid artery traits in exceptionally long-lived families.

TL;DR: Since common allelic variants within the authors' linkage peaks did not account for the findings, future follow-up resequencing of these regions in LLFS families should help advance the understanding of atherosclerosis, CVD, and healthy vascular aging.
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Identification of Polymorphisms Associated with Susceptibility to Therapy-Related MDS and AML.

TL;DR: Validation efforts are ongoing in independent tAML and AML cohorts and, where applicable, will also include SNPs in linkage disequilibrium with these associated SNPs.
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A commingling analysis of obesity in the Tecumseh community health study

TL;DR: Segregation analyses of these data using the unified, mixed model are necessary to resolve whether the commingling is due to a major gene effect or not.
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Commingling analysis of blood pressure in the Tecumseh community health study.

TL;DR: A commingling analysis of the distribution of systolic and diastolic blood pressure was performed on measurements from 9,226 individuals living in Tecumseh, Michigan during 1962–1965, suggesting a possibly complex etiology, but with some definite qualitative effects.