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William E. Kraus
Researcher at Duke University
Publications - 625
Citations - 40583
William E. Kraus is an academic researcher from Duke University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Heart failure & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 93, co-authored 565 publications receiving 33692 citations. Previous affiliations of William E. Kraus include University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center & University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Psychosocial benefits of cardiac rehabilitation among women compared with men.
Garrett Hazelton,Jennifer W Williams,Jessica Wakefield,Adam Perlman,William E. Kraus,Ruth Q. Wolever +5 more
TL;DR: Evidence is provided that CR offers psychosocial benefit for women, as has been reported in several small clinical samples, and some notable gender differences on anger and relationship satisfaction were observed.
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Short-term effects of fine particulate matter and ozone on the cardiac conduction system in patients undergoing cardiac catheterization
Siqi Zhang,Susanne Breitner,Wayne E. Cascio,Robert B. Devlin,Lucas M. Neas,David Diaz-Sanchez,William E. Kraus,Joel Schwartz,Elizabeth R. Hauser,Annette Peters,Alexandra Schneider +10 more
TL;DR: In patients undergoing cardiac catheterization, short-term exposure to air pollution was associated with increased HR and delays in atrioventricular conduction, ventricular depolarization and repolarization.
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Aerobic and resistance training effects on energy intake: the STRRIDE-AT/RT study.
Connie W. Bales,Victoria H. Hawk,Esther O Granville,Sarah B. Rose,Tamlyn Shields,Lori A. Bateman,Leslie H. Willis,Lucy W. Piner,Cris A. Slentz,Joseph A. Houmard,Dianne Gallup,Greg P. Samsa,William E. Kraus +12 more
TL;DR: Previously sedentary subjects completing 8 months of AT or AT/RT reduced their intakes of calories and macronutrients and BM, and in RT, fat intakes and REI (when expressed per FFM) decreased, BM was unchanged, and FFM increased.
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Neighborhood sociodemographic effects on the associations between long-term PM2.5 exposure and cardiovascular outcomes and diabetes.
Anne M. Weaver,Laura McGuinn,Lucas M. Neas,Jaime E. Mirowsky,Robert B. Devlin,Radhika Dhingra,Cavin Ward-Caviness,Wayne E. Cascio,William E. Kraus,Elizabeth R. Hauser,Qian Di,Joel Schwartz,David Diaz-Sanchez +12 more
TL;DR: Exposure to PM2.5 air pollution and neighborhood-level sociodemographic characteristics are associated with cardiovascular disease and possibly diabetes mellitus, and areas of relative disadvantage have a stronger association between PM 2.5 and hypertension compared with areas of Relative advantage.
Journal ArticleDOI
Myocardial perfusion, function, and dyssynchrony in patients with heart failure: baseline results from the single-photon emission computed tomography imaging ancillary study of the Heart Failure and A Controlled Trial Investigating Outcomes of Exercise TraiNing (HF-ACTION) Trial
Allen E. Atchley,Dalane W. Kitzman,David J. Whellan,Ami E. Iskandrian,Stephen J. Ellis,Robert Pagnanelli,Andrew Kao,Khaled Abdul-Nour,Christopher M. O'Connor,Greg Ewald,William E. Kraus,Salvador Borges-Neto +11 more
TL;DR: Gated SPECT imaging can provide important information in patients with HF due to severe LV dysfunction including quantitative measures of global systolic function, perfusion, and dyssynchrony, which are modestly but significantly related to symptom severity and objective measures of exercise capacity.