Institution
Ohio State University
Education•Columbus, Ohio, United States•
About: Ohio State University is a education organization based out in Columbus, Ohio, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Cancer. The organization has 102421 authors who have published 222715 publications receiving 8373403 citations. The organization is also known as: Ohio State & The Ohio State University.
Topics: Population, Cancer, Poison control, Galaxy, Context (language use)
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the illiquidity of corporate bonds and its asset-pricing implications using transactions data from 2003 to 2009, and showed that the amount of illiquidness in corporate bonds is substantial, significantly greater than what can be explained by bid-ask spreads.
Abstract: This paper examines the illiquidity of corporate bonds and its asset-pricing implications. Using transactions data from 2003 to 2009, we show that the illiquidity in corporate bonds is substantial, significantly greater than what can be explained by bid–ask spreads. We establish a strong link between bond illiquidity and bond prices. In aggregate, changes in market-level illiquidity explain a substantial part of the time variation in yield spreads of high-rated (AAA through A) bonds, overshadowing the credit risk component. In the cross-section, the bond-level illiquidity measure explains individual bond yield spreads with large economic significance.
860 citations
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University of Louisville1, University of Michigan2, Duke University3, University of Washington4, Ohio State University5, Johns Hopkins University6, Cleveland Clinic7, University of Rochester8, University of Minnesota9, Sharp Memorial Hospital10, University of Alabama at Birmingham11, Saint Barnabas Medical Center12, Columbia University13, Thoratec14
TL;DR: Key elements in managing patients supported with the new continuous-flow LVADs are proposed, including implants techniques, troubleshooting device problems, and algorithms for outpatient management, including the diagnosis and treatment of related problems associated with the HeartMate II.
Abstract: Continuous-flow left ventricular assist devices (LVAD) have emerged as the standard of care for advanced heart failure patients requiring long-term mechanical circulatory support. Evidence-based clinical management of LVAD-supported patients is becoming increasingly important for optimizing outcomes. In this state-of-art review, we propose key elements in managing patients supported with the new continuous-flow LVADs. Although most of the presented information is largely based on investigator experience during the 1,300-patient HeartMate II clinical trial, many of the discussed principles can be applied to other emerging devices as well. Patient selection, pre-operative preparation, and the timing of LVAD implant are some of the most important elements critical to successful circulatory support and are principles universal to all devices. In addition, proper nutrition management and avoidance of infectious complications can significantly affect morbidity and mortality during LVAD support. Optimizing intraoperative and peri-operative care, and the monitoring and treatment of other organ system dysfunction as it relates to LVAD support, are discussed. A multidisciplinary heart failure team must be organized and charged with providing comprehensive care from initial referral until support is terminated. Preparing for hospital discharge requires detailed education for the patient and family or friends, with provisions for emergencies and routine care. Implantation techniques, troubleshooting device problems, and algorithms for outpatient management, including the diagnosis and treatment of related problems associated with the HeartMate II, are discussed as an example of a specific continuous-flow LVAD. Ongoing trials with other continuous-flow devices may produce additional information in the future for improving clinical management of patients with these devices.
860 citations
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TL;DR: Bethe's hypothesis for the ground state of a one-dimensional cyclic chain of anisotropic nearest-neighbor spin-spin interactions was proved for any fixed number of down spins as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract: Bethe's hypothesis is proved for the ground state of a one-dimensional cyclic chain of anisotropic nearest-neighbor spin-spin interactions. The proof holds for any fixed number of down spins.
860 citations
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Boston Medical Center1, Vanderbilt University Medical Center2, Yale University3, Ohio State University4, Duke University5, University of Maryland, Baltimore6, University of Pennsylvania7, United States Department of Veterans Affairs8, University of California, San Francisco9, Washington University in St. Louis10, Brigham and Women's Hospital11, Cleveland Clinic12
TL;DR: Worsening renal function occurs frequently among hospitalized HF patients and is associated with significantly worse outcomes and clinical characteristics available at hospital admission can be used to identify patients at increased risk for developing WRF.
860 citations
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TL;DR: Improved and updated estimates of the cost of foodborne illness are provided by adding a replication of the 2011 CDC model to existing cost-of-illness models and improvements to methodology enhanced the performance of each existing economic model.
859 citations
Authors
Showing all 103197 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Paul M. Ridker | 233 | 1242 | 245097 |
George Davey Smith | 224 | 2540 | 248373 |
Carlo M. Croce | 198 | 1135 | 189007 |
Eric J. Topol | 193 | 1373 | 151025 |
Bernard Rosner | 190 | 1162 | 147661 |
David H. Weinberg | 183 | 700 | 171424 |
Anil K. Jain | 183 | 1016 | 192151 |
Michael I. Jordan | 176 | 1016 | 216204 |
Kay-Tee Khaw | 174 | 1389 | 138782 |
Richard K. Wilson | 173 | 463 | 260000 |
Yang Yang | 164 | 2704 | 144071 |
Brian L Winer | 162 | 1832 | 128850 |
Jian-Kang Zhu | 161 | 550 | 105551 |
Elaine R. Mardis | 156 | 485 | 226700 |
R. E. Hughes | 154 | 1312 | 110970 |