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Stanley S. Franklin

Researcher at University of California, Irvine

Publications -  177
Citations -  22496

Stanley S. Franklin is an academic researcher from University of California, Irvine. The author has contributed to research in topics: Blood pressure & Pulse pressure. The author has an hindex of 57, co-authored 177 publications receiving 21327 citations. Previous affiliations of Stanley S. Franklin include University of California, Berkeley & University of California.

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Journal Article

Expert consensus document on arterial stiffness : methodological issues and clinical applications. Commentary

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors summarized the proceedings of several meetings of the European Network for Non-invasive Investigation of Large Arteries and aimed at providing an updated and practical overview of the most relevant methodological aspects and clinical applications in this area.
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Hemodynamic Patterns of Age-Related Changes in Blood Pressure: The Framingham Heart Study

TL;DR: The late fall in DBP after age 60 years, associated with a continual rise in SBP, cannot be explained by "burned out" diastolic hypertension or by "selective survivorship" but is consistent with increased large artery stiffness.
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Is Pulse Pressure Useful in Predicting Risk for Coronary Heart Disease? The Framingham Heart Study

TL;DR: In the middle-aged and elderly, CHD risk increased with lower DBP at any level of SBP>/=120 mm Hg, suggesting that higher PP was an important component of risk.
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Impact of the Metabolic Syndrome on Mortality From Coronary Heart Disease, Cardiovascular Disease, and All Causes in United States Adults

TL;DR: CHD, CVD, and total mortality are significantly higher in US adults with than in those without MetS, and MetS more strongly predicts CHD,CVD,and total mortality than its individual components.
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Does the Relation of Blood Pressure to Coronary Heart Disease Risk Change With Aging? The Framingham Heart Study

TL;DR: Age 50 to 59 years was a transition period when all 3 BP indexes were comparable predictors, and from 60 years of age on, DBP was negatively related to CHD risk so that PP became superior to SBP.