M
Michael J. Mack
Researcher at Scott & White Hospital
Publications - 634
Citations - 36680
Michael J. Mack is an academic researcher from Scott & White Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Valve replacement & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 89, co-authored 519 publications receiving 28877 citations. Previous affiliations of Michael J. Mack include Baylor University Medical Center & Medical City Dallas Hospital.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Long-Term Survival Following Multivessel Revascularization in Patients With Diabetes: The FREEDOM Follow-On Study
Michael E. Farkouh,Michael J. Domanski,George Dangas,Lucas C. Godoy,Michael J. Mack,Flora S. Siami,Taye H. Hamza,Binita Shah,Giulio G. Stefanini,Mandeep S. Sidhu,Jean-François Tanguay,Krishnan Ramanathan,Samin K. Sharma,John K. French,Whady Hueb,David J. Cohen,Valentin Fuster,Freedom Follow-On Study Investigators +17 more
TL;DR: In patients with DM and MVD, coronary revascularization with CABG leads to lower all-cause mortality than with PCI-DES in long-term follow-up, and this study concludes that this treatment is superior to percutaneous coronary intervention with drug-eluting stents for patients with diabetes mellitus.
Journal ArticleDOI
Analysis of hemodynamic changes during beating heart surgical procedures
TL;DR: The increase of right ventricular end-diastolic pressure in all positions suggests that the major cause of hemodynamic changes is disturbed diastolic filling of the right ventricle, especially by direct ventricular compression.
Journal ArticleDOI
Revascularization for Unprotected Left Main Stem Coronary Artery Stenosis: Stenting or Surgery
David P. Taggart,Sanjay Kaul,William E. Boden,T. Bruce Ferguson,Robert A. Guyton,Michael J. Mack,Paul Sergeant,Richard J. Shemin,Peter K. Smith,Salim Yusuf +9 more
TL;DR: CABG should indeed remain the preferred revascularization treatment in good surgical candidates with unprotected LMS stenosis and the optimum approach to informed consent is examined.
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Incidence, predictors and outcomes of incomplete revascularization after percutaneous coronary intervention and coronary artery bypass grafting: a subgroup analysis of 3-year SYNTAX data.
Stuart J. Head,Michael J. Mack,David R. Holmes,Friedrich W. Mohr,Marie Claude Morice,Patrick W. Serruys,A. Pieter Kappetein +6 more
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that incomplete revascularization is associated with adverse events during follow-up after PCI but not CABG, and independent predictors of incompleteRevascularization were explored.
Journal ArticleDOI
Predicting recurrent mitral regurgitation after mitral valve repair for severe ischemic mitral regurgitation.
Irving L. Kron,Judy Hung,Jessica Overbey,Denis Bouchard,Annetine C. Gelijns,Alan J. Moskowitz,Pierre Voisine,Patrick T. O'Gara,Michael Argenziano,Robert E. Michler,Marc Gillinov,John D. Puskas,James S. Gammie,Michael J. Mack,Peter K. Smith,Chittoor B. Sai-Sudhakar,Timothy J. Gardner,Gorav Ailawadi,Xin Zeng,Karen O'Sullivan,Michael K. Parides,Roger Swayze,Vinod H. Thourani,Eric A. Rose,Louis P. Perrault,Michael A. Acker +25 more
TL;DR: The model demonstrated good discrimination in identifying patients who will survive 2 years without recurrent mitral regurgitation after mitral valve repair and offer a clinically relevant risk score for selection of surgical candidates for this procedure.