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Ronald L. Menlove

Researcher at University of Utah

Publications -  73
Citations -  7761

Ronald L. Menlove is an academic researcher from University of Utah. The author has contributed to research in topics: Transplantation & Streptokinase. The author has an hindex of 30, co-authored 73 publications receiving 7610 citations. Previous affiliations of Ronald L. Menlove include United States Department of Veterans Affairs & LDS Hospital.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Determination of transmural location of onset of activation from cardiac surface electrograms

TL;DR: Methods of estimating depth of origin of ventricular activation from cardiac surface electrograms, particularly those involving gradients of isochrones, should be useful for evaluating electromaps of patients undergoing surgery for ablation of tachyarrhythmias.
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Low-dose enoximone in subjects awaiting cardiac transplantation. Clinical results and effects on beta-adrenergic receptors.

TL;DR: During a 3-year period, enoximone was administered to 73 pretransplantation patients with end-stage heart failure who exhibited a clinical requirement for additional inotropic support and the clinical course and myocardial beta-adrenergic receptor status in the explanted hearts of these 73 patients was compared with results in 113 concurrently listed pretrans transplantation patients not requiring additional inotrop support.
Proceedings Article

Using Attitudinal Questionnaires to Achieve Benefits Optimization.

TL;DR: The results of the work suggest that a formative evaluation study can facilitate system adoption and utilization without compromising concurrent needs of scientific objectivity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of early thrombolytic therapy (anistreplase versus streptokinase) on enzymatic and electrocardiographic infarct size in acute myocardial infarction

TL;DR: The results support use of early reperfusion to reduce infarct size in acute myocardial infarction with administration of streptokinase and anistreplase.
Journal ArticleDOI

Choice between concurrent schedules

TL;DR: Choice between concurrent schedules conforms approximately to the same relationship as does choice between alternatives in a single concurrent schedule.