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T. Jared Bunch
Researcher at University of Utah
Publications - 303
Citations - 10695
T. Jared Bunch is an academic researcher from University of Utah. The author has contributed to research in topics: Atrial fibrillation & Catheter ablation. The author has an hindex of 48, co-authored 254 publications receiving 8924 citations. Previous affiliations of T. Jared Bunch include Cedars-Sinai Medical Center & Primary Children's Hospital.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Effect of Catheter Ablation vs Antiarrhythmic Drug Therapy on Mortality, Stroke, Bleeding, and Cardiac Arrest Among Patients With Atrial Fibrillation: The CABANA Randomized Clinical Trial
Douglas L. Packer,Daniel B. Mark,Richard A. Robb,Kristi H. Monahan,Tristram D. Bahnson,Jeanne E. Poole,Peter A. Noseworthy,Yves Rosenberg,Neal Jeffries,L. Brent Mitchell,Greg C. Flaker,Evgeny Pokushalov,Alexander Romanov,T. Jared Bunch,Georg Noelker,Ardashev Av,Amiran Revishvili,David J. Wilber,Riccardo Cappato,Karl-Heinz Kuck,Gerhard Hindricks,D. Wyn Davies,Peter R. Kowey,Gerald V. Naccarelli,James A. Reiffel,Jonathan P. Piccini,Adam P. Silverstein,Hussein R. Al-Khalidi,Kerry L. Lee +28 more
TL;DR: Among patients with AF, the strategy of catheter ablation, compared with medical therapy, did not significantly reduce the primary composite end point of death, disabling stroke, serious bleeding, or cardiac arrest, which should be considered in interpreting the results of the trial.
Journal ArticleDOI
Percutaneous Implantation of an Entirely Intracardiac Leadless Pacemaker
Vivek Y. Reddy,Derek V. Exner,Daniel J. Cantillon,Rahul N. Doshi,T. Jared Bunch,Gery Tomassoni,Paul A. Friedman,N.A. Mark Estes,John Ip,Imran Niazi,Kenneth Plunkitt,Rajesh Banker,JG Porterfield,James E. Ip,Srinivas R. Dukkipati +14 more
TL;DR: The leadless cardiac pacemaker met prespecified pacing and sensing requirements in the large majority of patients, and met the primary safety end point through 6 months.
Journal ArticleDOI
Freedom from recurrent ventricular tachycardia after catheter ablation is associated with improved survival in patients with structural heart disease: An International VT Ablation Center Collaborative Group study
Roderick Tung,Marmar Vaseghi,David S. Frankel,Pasquale Vergara,Luigi Di Biase,Koichi Nagashima,Ricky Yu,Sitaram Vangala,Chi-Hong Tseng,Eue Keun Choi,Shaan Khurshid,Mehul Patel,Nilesh Mathuria,Shiro Nakahara,Wendy S. Tzou,William H. Sauer,Kairav Vakil,Usha B. Tedrow,J. David Burkhardt,Venkatakrishna N. Tholakanahalli,Anastasios Saliaris,Timm Dickfeld,J. Peter Weiss,T. Jared Bunch,Madhu Reddy,Arun Kanmanthareddy,David J. Callans,Dhanunjaya Lakkireddy,Andrea Natale,Francis E. Marchlinski,William G. Stevenson,Paolo Della Bella,Kalyanam Shivkumar +32 more
TL;DR: Catheter ablation of VT in patients with structural heart disease results in 70% freedom from VT recurrence, with an overall transplant and/or mortality rate of 15% at 1 year, which is associated with improved transplant-free survival, independent of heart failure severity.
Journal ArticleDOI
Long-term outcomes of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest after successful early defibrillation.
T. Jared Bunch,Roger D. White,Bernard J. Gersh,Ryan A. Meverden,David O. Hodge,Karla V. Ballman,Stephen C. Hammill,Win Kuang Shen,Douglas L. Packer +8 more
TL;DR: Long-term survival among patients who have undergone rapid defibrillation after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest is similar to that among age-, sex-, and disease-matched patients who did not have out- of- hospital cardiac arrest, and the quality of life among the majority of survivors isSimilar to that of the general population.
Journal ArticleDOI
Smooth muscle cells in human coronary atherosclerosis can originate from cells administered at marrow transplantation
Noel M. Caplice,T. Jared Bunch,Paul G. Stalboerger,Shaohua Wang,David Simper,Dylan V. Miller,Stephen J. Russell,Mark R. Litzow,William D. Edwards +8 more
TL;DR: This work uses sex-mismatched bone marrow transplant subjects to show that smooth muscle cells throughout the atherosclerotic vessel wall can derive from donor bone marrow and demonstrate extensive recruitment of these cells in diseased compared with undiseased segments.