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Stuart M. Cobbe

Researcher at University of Glasgow

Publications -  215
Citations -  31173

Stuart M. Cobbe is an academic researcher from University of Glasgow. The author has contributed to research in topics: Myocardial infarction & Heart failure. The author has an hindex of 64, co-authored 214 publications receiving 30218 citations. Previous affiliations of Stuart M. Cobbe include British Heart Foundation & Glasgow Royal Infirmary.

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Reference values and reproducibility of Doppler echocardiography in the assessment of the tricuspid valve and right ventricular diastolic function in normal subjects

TL;DR: The Doppler echocardiographic indexes of the tricuspid and mitral valves were assessed in 74 normal subjects and the day-to-day variability was quite significant especially for the pressure half-time, deceleration and acceleration slope values.
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Adenosine or adenosine triphosphate forsupraventricular tachycardias? Comparative double-blind randomized study in patients with spontaneous or inducible arrhythmias

TL;DR: Adenosine and ATP were equally effective for the diagnosis and treatment of supraventricular tachycardias and the incidence and severity of side effects were similar and adenosine has the advantage of being more stable.
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Chemical cardioversion of atrial fibrillation with intravenous dofetilide.

TL;DR: The compound appears to have only limited effect in cardioversion of atrial fibrillation of moderate duration, and patients who cardioverted suffered episodes of torsades de pointes following the active drug.
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Action potential prolongation and potassium currents in left-ventricular myocytes isolated from hypertrophied rabbit hearts.

TL;DR: Left-ventricular hypertrophy induced by perinephritis hypertension in the rabbit is associated with a prolongation in APD, and reductions in IKl, sustained outward current and Ito may contribute to the prolongationIn APD.
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Sex differences in outcome following community-based cardiopulmonary arrest.

TL;DR: Women have a better early prognosis than men, however, this represents a postponement of death, rather than avoidance, in overall case-fatality rates to discharge.