Institution
University of Valencia
Education•Valencia, Spain•
About: University of Valencia is a education organization based out in Valencia, Spain. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Neutrino. The organization has 27096 authors who have published 65669 publications receiving 1765689 citations. The organization is also known as: Universitat de València & UV.
Topics: Population, Neutrino, European union, Higgs boson, Lepton
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: The global electrophilicity power of a series of dipoles and dipolarophiles commonly used in 1,3-dipolar cycloadditions may be conveniently classified within a unique relative scale.
289 citations
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288 citations
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TL;DR: The anticipatory hormonal and psychological responses of 17 male judo players to an official competition with the data obtained during eight resting sessions carried out at the same time of day are compared to suggest an adaptive psychobiological response to a competition.
288 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the performance of the missing transverse momentum reconstruction was evaluated using data collected in pp collisions at a centre-of-mass energy of 7 TeV in 2010.
Abstract: The measurement of missing transverse momentum in the ATLAS detector, described in this paper, makes use of the full event reconstruction and a calibration based on reconstructed physics objects. The performance of the missing transverse momentum reconstruction is evaluated using data collected in pp collisions at a centre-of-mass energy of 7 TeV in 2010. Minimum bias events and events with jets of hadrons are used from data samples corresponding to an integrated luminosity of about 0.3 nb(-1) and 600 nb(-1) respectively, together with events containing a Z boson decaying to two leptons (electrons or muons) or a W boson decaying to a lepton (electron or muon) and a neutrino, from a data sample corresponding to an integrated luminosity of about 36 pb(-1). An estimate of the systematic uncertainty on the missing transverse momentum scale is presented.
288 citations
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University of Rochester1, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center2, Duke University3, Tufts University4, University of California, San Francisco5, Mount Sinai St. Luke's and Mount Sinai Roosevelt6, Sheba Medical Center7, Semmelweis University8, Harvard University9, University of Valencia10, Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center11, Tel Aviv University12, University of Bonn13, Loyola University Chicago14
TL;DR: The findings indicate that in patients with mild heart-failure symptoms, left ventricular dysfunction, and left bundle-branch block, early intervention with CRT-D was associated with a significant long-term survival benefit.
Abstract: BACKGROUND The Multicenter Automatic Defibrillator Implantation Trial with Cardiac Resynchronization Therapy (MADIT-CRT) showed that early intervention with cardiac-resynchronization therapy with a defibrillator (CRT-D) in patients with an electrocardiographic pattern showing left bundle-branch block was associated with a significant reduction in heart-failure events over a median follow-up of 2.4 years, as compared with defibrillator therapy alone. METHODS We evaluated the effect of CRT-D on long-term survival in the MADIT-CRT population. Post-trial follow-up over a median period of 5.6 years was assessed among all 1691 surviving patients (phase 1) and subsequently among 854 patients who were enrolled in post-trial registries (phase 2). All reported analyses were performed on an intention-to-treat basis. RESULTS At 7 years of follow-up after initial enrollment, the cumulative rate of death from any cause among patients with left bundle-branch block was 18% among patients randomly assigned to CRT-D, as compared with 29% among those randomly assigned to defibrillator therapy alone (adjusted hazard ratio in the CRT-D group, 0.59; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.43 to 0.80; P<0.001). The long-term survival benefit of CRT-D in patients with left bundle-branch block did not differ significantly according to sex, cause of cardiomyopathy, or QRS duration. In contrast, CRT-D was not associated with any clinical benefit and possibly with harm in patients without left bundlebranch block (adjusted hazard ratio for death from any cause, 1.57; 95% CI, 1.03 to 2.39; P = 0.04; P<0.001 for interaction of treatment with QRS morphologic findings). CONCLUSIONS Our findings indicate that in patients with mild heart-failure symptoms, left ventricular dysfunction, and left bundle-branch block, early intervention with CRT-D was associated with a significant long-term survival benefit. (Funded by Boston Scientific; ClinicalTrials.gov numbers, NCT00180271, NCT01294449, and NCT02060110.)
288 citations
Authors
Showing all 27402 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
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H. S. Chen | 179 | 2401 | 178529 |
Alvaro Pascual-Leone | 165 | 969 | 98251 |
Sabino Matarrese | 155 | 775 | 123278 |
Subir Sarkar | 149 | 1542 | 144614 |
Carlos Escobar | 148 | 1184 | 95346 |
Marco Costa | 146 | 1458 | 105096 |
Carmen García | 139 | 1503 | 96925 |
Javier Cuevas | 138 | 1689 | 103604 |
M. I. Martínez | 134 | 1251 | 79885 |
Marco Aurelio Diaz | 134 | 1015 | 93580 |
Avelino Corma | 134 | 1049 | 89095 |
Kevin Lannon | 133 | 1652 | 95436 |
Marina Cobal | 132 | 1078 | 85437 |
Mogens Dam | 131 | 1109 | 83717 |
Marcel Vos | 131 | 993 | 85194 |