S
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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Journal ArticleDOI
Reproducibility and repeatability of peripheral microvascular assessment using iontophoresis in conjunction with laser Doppler imaging.
TL;DR: LDI can be used to assess peripheral vascular response with good repeatability as long as measurements are corrected for skin resistance, which affects drug delivery.
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Enhancing the power of record linkage involving low quality personal identifiers: Use of the best link principle and cause of death prior likelihoods
TL;DR: The linkage process was able to use the best-link principle to take maximum advantage of the fact that, because the Heartstart subjects involved had died, there was an extremely high a priori probability that they would be represented on the national deaths file.
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Design of the omapatrilat in persons with enhanced risk of atherosclerotic events (opera) trial
John B. Kostis,Stuart M. Cobbe,Colin I. Johnston,Ian Ford,Michael Murphy,Michael A. Weber,Henry R. Black,Pierre-François Plouin,Daniel Levy,G. Mancia,Pierre Larochelle,R. Kolloch,Michael H. Alderman,Luis M. Ruilope,Björn Dahlöf,John M. Flack,Robert Wolf +16 more
TL;DR: The OPERA trial is a large clinical trial of omapatrilat, a vasopeptidase inhibitor, in patients with stage 1 isolated systolic hypertension, the first study to examine whether effective antihypertensive treatment can provide survival and clinical end point benefits in older persons with this common condition.
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Insulin resistance as a contributor to myocardial ischaemia independent of obstructive coronary atheroma: a role for insulin sensitisation?
TL;DR: It was found that insulin sensitising modalities have a potential role in the amelioration of angina and that randomised controlled studies are therefore warranted.
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Junctional Rhythm—A Suitable Surrogate Endpoint in Catheter Ablation of Atrioventricular Nodal Reentry Tachycardia?
TL;DR: This work sought to further characterize the sensitivity, specificity, and predictive value of JR in AVNRT ablation as well as to assess the utility of JR as a marker of successful slow pathway ablation.