T
Telly A. Meadows
Researcher at Cleveland Clinic
Publications - 7
Citations - 626
Telly A. Meadows is an academic researcher from Cleveland Clinic. The author has contributed to research in topics: Risk factor & Framingham Risk Score. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 7 publications receiving 561 citations.
Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
Clinical Aspects of Platelet Inhibitors and Thrombus Formation
Telly A. Meadows,Deepak L. Bhatt +1 more
TL;DR: The platelet, once thought to be solely involved in clot formation, is now known to be a key mediator in various others processes such as inflammation, thrombosis, and atherosclerosis.
Journal ArticleDOI
Multidetector computed tomographic angiography in planning of reoperative cardiothoracic surgery.
Apur R. Kamdar,Telly A. Meadows,Eric E. Roselli,Eiran Z. Gorodeski,Ronan J. Curtin,Joseph F. Sabik,Paul Schoenhagen,Richard D. White,Bruce W. Lytle,Scott D. Flamm,Milind Y. Desai +10 more
TL;DR: Routine use of preoperative MDCTA to detect high- risk findings has a strong association with adoption of preventive surgical strategies in high-risk patients undergoing redo cardiac surgery.
Journal ArticleDOI
Ethnic Differences in Cardiovascular Risks and Mortality in Atherothrombotic Disease: Insights From the REduction of Atherothrombosis for Continued Health (REACH) Registry
Telly A. Meadows,Deepak L. Bhatt,Christopher P. Cannon,Bernard J. Gersh,Joachim Röther,Shinya Goto,Chiau Suong Liau,Peter W.F. Wilson,Genevieve Salette,Sidney C. Smith,Ph. Gabriel Steg +10 more
TL;DR: The REACH Registry, a large international study of individuals with atherothrombotic disease, documents the important ethnic-specific differences in cardiovascular risk factors and variations in cardiovascular mortality that currently exist worldwide.
Journal ArticleDOI
Ethnic differences in the prevalence and treatment of cardiovascular risk factors in US outpatients with peripheral arterial disease: insights from the reduction of atherothrombosis for continued health (REACH) registry.
Telly A. Meadows,Deepak L. Bhatt,Alan T. Hirsch,Mark A. Creager,Robert M. Califf,E. Magnus Ohman,Christopher P. Cannon,Kim A. Eagle,Mark J. Alberts,Shinya Goto,Sidney C. Smith,Peter W.F. Wilson,Karol E. Watson,P. Gabriel Steg +13 more
TL;DR: Black and Hispanics were more likely to have diabetes mellitus and hypertension, whereas whites had a higher rate of diagnosed hypercholesterolemia, and ethnic-related differences in the use of surgical revascularization procedures were documented.