S
Suzanne Oparil
Researcher at University of Alabama at Birmingham
Publications - 941
Citations - 122414
Suzanne Oparil is an academic researcher from University of Alabama at Birmingham. The author has contributed to research in topics: Blood pressure & Angiotensin II. The author has an hindex of 106, co-authored 885 publications receiving 113983 citations. Previous affiliations of Suzanne Oparil include Michigan State University & Oregon Health & Science University.
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Abstract 184: Sex Differences in the Effect of Hypertension on Stroke Risk in the REasons for Geographic and Racial Differences in Stroke Study
Tracy E. Madsen,George Howard,Dawn Kleindorfer,Karen L. Furie,Simin Liu,Suzanne Oparil,Virginia J. Howard +6 more
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What Is or What Is Not a Risk Factor for Arterial Hypertension? Not Hamlet, but Medical Students Answer That Question
Tomasz Sobierajski,Stanisław J. Surma,Monika Romańczyk,Krzysztof Łabuzek,Krzysztof J. Filipiak,Suzanne Oparil +5 more
TL;DR: Students almost unanimously indicated that the complications of hypertension include heart failure, heart attack, stroke, aortic aneurysm, kidney failure, atherosclerosis, eye diseases and worse prognosis in COVID-19.
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A major paradigm shift.
TL;DR: This new Strategic Vision calls for the Society to leverage its past successes as a ecognized and respected forum for hypertension research and education of hypertension pecialists and to reach out to new constituencies, including primary care providers, ealth care policy makers, managed care providers/payers, and, most of all, the authors' patients.
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Is There a New Treatment for Hypertensive Disease in the Horizon?: Role of Soluble Guanylate Cyclase
Veronica Franco,Suzanne Oparil +1 more
TL;DR: It is shown that atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) modulates cardiac hypertrophy and fibrosis in response to a variety of hemodynamic stresses, and the unopposed profibrotic/hypertrophic factors predominate.
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Depressive Symptoms and Incident Hospitalization for Heart Failure: Findings From the REGARDS Study
Yulia Khodneva,Parag Goyal,Emily B. Levitan,Elizabeth A. Jackson,Suzanne Oparil,Madeline R Sterling,Andrea Cherrington,Raegan W. Durant,Monika M. Safford +8 more
TL;DR: Depressive symptoms were associated with incident hospitalization for HFpEF, but not for HFrEF, or among those with baseline CHD, or for overall HF, the elevated risk became attenuated after controlling for covariates.