S
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
Michael F. O'Rourke,Stanley S. Franklin,Stéphane Laurent,John R. Cockcroft,Luc M. Van Bortel,Pierre Boutouyrie,Cristina Giannattasio,Daniel Hayoz,Bruno Pannier,Charalambos Vlachopoulos,Ian B. Wilkinson,Harry A.J. Struijker-Boudier +11 more
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
Stanley S. Franklin,William Gustin,Nathan D. Wong,Martin G. Larson,Michael A. Weber,William B. Kannel,Daniel Levy +6 more
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
Shaista Malik,Nathan D. Wong,Stanley S. Franklin,Tripthi V. Kamath,Gilbert L'Italien,Jose R. Pio,G. Rhys Williams +6 more
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
Stanley S. Franklin,Martin G. Larson,Shehzad A. Khan,Nathan D. Wong,Eric P. Leip,William B. Kannel,Daniel Levy +6 more
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.