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Oliver J. Ziff

Researcher at University College London

Publications -  42
Citations -  1120

Oliver J. Ziff is an academic researcher from University College London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Atrial fibrillation. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 38 publications receiving 786 citations. Previous affiliations of Oliver J. Ziff include University of Alberta & St James's University Hospital.

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Safety and efficacy of digoxin: systematic review and meta-analysis of observational and controlled trial data

TL;DR: Digoxin is associated with a neutral effect on mortality in randomised trials and a lower rate of admissions to hospital across all study types and Regardless of statistical analysis, prescription biases limit the value of observational data.
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Revascularization of Transplanted Pancreatic Islets and Role of the Transplantation Site

TL;DR: This review considers the process of islet revascularization after transplant, its limiting factors, and potential strategies to improve this critical step and provides a characterization of alternative transplant sites.
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Current status of clinical islet transplantation

TL;DR: It is apparent that as the community continues to work together further optimizing IT, it is hopeful a cure for T1DM will soon be achievable, and a brief overview presents recent progress.
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Digoxin: the good and the bad

TL;DR: A comprehensive meta-analysis of all digoxin studies demonstrated a neutral effect on mortality and contradicts prior observational data that overlook the fact that digitalis is usually given as second-line therapy to the sickest patients.
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Remote ischaemic conditioning reduces infarct size in animal in vivo models of ischaemia-reperfusion injury: a systematic review and meta-analysis

TL;DR: RIC significantly reduces infarct size in in vivo models of myocardial IRI, with a clear need for more well-performed in vivo studies with particular emphasis on detailed characterization of RIC protocols and investigating the potential impact of gender.