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Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine
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Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine

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    • ACC / WCC 2023
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Coronary disease

  • You have access
    Cardiac rehabilitation: not just exercise anymore
    Fredric J. Pashkow, MD
    Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine March 1996, 63 (2) 116-123;

    The treatment of sicker patients and shorter hospital stays are forcing a rethinking of approaches to cardiac rehabilitation.

  • You have access
    Coronary heart disease in African Americans: primary and secondary prevention
    Luther T. Clark, MD and Obinnaya Emerole, MD
    Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine September 1995, 62 (5) 285-292;

    How physicians can help improve the cardiovascular health of their black patients, who have a high level of CHD risk factors.

  • You have access
    Current status of stress echocardiography in the diagnosis of coronary artery disease
    Thomas Marwick, MD
    Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine July 1995, 62 (4) 227-234;

    Electrocardiography with exercise or pharmacologic stress is gaining clinical acceptance, but its accuracy depends on the expertise of the people who perform it.

  • You have access
    Homocysteine and coronary artery disease
    Killian Robinson, MD, Ellen Mayer, MD and Donald W. Jacobsen, PhD
    Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine November 1994, 61 (6) 438-450;
  • You have access
    Coronary artery disease in renal transplant recipients
    William E. Braun, MD and Thomas H. Marwick, MD
    Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine September 1994, 61 (5) 370-385;

    Screening for coronary artery disease before transplantation can identify high -risk patients and save lives and money.

  • You have access
    Temporal electrical heterogeneity for detecting coronary artery disease: results in a heterogeneous cardiac population
    Steven E. Jones, MD and Donald A. Underwood, MD
    Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine July 1994, 61 (4) 304-307;
  • You have access
    Diagnostic evaluation of the patient with coronary artery disease
    Fredric J. Pashkow, MD
    Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine January 1994, 61 (1) 43-48;

    Evaluation of patients with possible CAD involves balancing conflicting considerations, such as test sensitivity and accuracy, cost, and access.

  • You have access
    Coronary artery disease in women: a risk-factor analysis
    Anita Zeiler Arnold, DO and Donald A. Underwood, MD
    Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine September 1993, 60 (5) 387-392;

    Coronary artery disease (CAD) has long been considered a disease of men. However, the risk factors for CAD are similar for women and men, and these factors need to be considered when counseling women for the prevention of CAD.

  • You have access
    Coronary artery disease in young women: risk factor analysis and long-term follow-up
    Anita Zeiler Arnold, DO and Douglas S. Moodie, MD
    Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine September 1993, 60 (5) 393-398;

    Risk factors include hypertension, hypercholesterolemia, diabetes mellitus, familial coronary disease, and smoking. The long-term prognosis is excellent for those without advanced diabetes mellitus and renal failure.

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    Efficacy of beta blockade, thrombolytic therapy, and coronary angioplasty in diabetic patients with coronary artery disease
    Conrad Simpfendorfer, MD
    Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine March 1993, 60 (2) 145-149;

    Determining the effectiveness of these interventions in diabetic patients has received little attention, despite the association of diabetes with increased mortality from coronary artery disease.

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