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Richard E. Shaw

Researcher at Valley Hospital

Publications -  134
Citations -  7211

Richard E. Shaw is an academic researcher from Valley Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Angioplasty & Myocardial infarction. The author has an hindex of 43, co-authored 129 publications receiving 6849 citations. Previous affiliations of Richard E. Shaw include University of Pennsylvania & Christiana Care Health System.

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In-hospital cardiac mortality after acute closure after coronary angioplasty: Analysis of risk factors from 8,207 procedures

TL;DR: Cardiac death after elective coronary angioplasty is very rare in experienced centers and occurs most often in women with a large amount of potentially ischemic myocardium, and Hypotension often precedes the fatal closure event.
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Multiple vessel coronary angioplasty: Classification, results, and patterns of restenosis in 494 consecutive patients

TL;DR: Coronary angioplasty (either initially or with repeat PTCA) has been the definitive treatment in 453 of the 494 patients for an overall success of 92%.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED at 400 WORDS)
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Development of a risk adjustment mortality model using the American College of Cardiology-National Cardiovascular Data Registry (ACC-NCDR) experience: 1998-2000.

TL;DR: A risk adjustment model for in-hospital mortality after percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) procedures was successfully developed using a contemporary multi-center registry and is an important tool for valid comparison of in- hospital mortality after PCI.
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A call to action (acute coronary treatment and intervention outcomes network):A National Effort to Promote Timely Clinical Feedback and Support Continuous Quality Improvement for Acute Myocardial Infarction

TL;DR: The National Cardiovascular Data Registry ACTION–Get With the Guidelines (AR-G) represents a unified, national, acute myocardial infarction registry and supports a robust quality improvement effort designed to encourage evidence-based acute my Cardiac Artery Disease care and, ultimately, improve patient outcomes.