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Editorials
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Addressing the Complex Synergy Between Exercise Capacity and BMI and Its Relationship to All-Cause Mortality
Mayo Clinic ProceedingsVol. 96Issue 12p2942–2944Published in issue: December, 2021- Thomas G. Allison
Cited in Scopus: 1In this issue, Rozanski et al1 present “Synergistic Assessment of Mortality Risk According to Body Mass Index and Exercise Ability and Capacity in Patients Referred for Radionuclide Stress Testing.” Starting with 54,500 patients undergoing radionuclide stress testing at Cedars Sinai over a 22-year period, they present 21,638 patients for analysis after excluding patients with coronary artery disease at baseline, evidence of ischemia on radionuclide images, those who are age 65 years or older, and a few with missing data or inadequate follow-up. - Editorial
Treating Coronary Artery Disease in Diabetic Patients With Balloons and Stainless Steel: What Is the Role of Percutaneous Coronary Intervention?
Mayo Clinic ProceedingsVol. 88Issue 1p4–6Published in issue: January, 2013- Joseph G. Murphy
- Thomas G. Allison
Cited in Scopus: 0“The doctor of the future will give no medicine but will interest her or his patients in the care of the human frame, in a proper diet, and in the cause and prevention of disease.”Thomas A. Edison (1847-1931) - Editorial
Identification and Treatment of Psychosocial Risk Factors for Coronary Artery Disease
Mayo Clinic ProceedingsVol. 71Issue 8p817–819Published in issue: August, 1996- Thomas G. Allison
Cited in Scopus: 3Since the introduction of the concept of the type A behavior pattern by Friedman and Rosenman in 1959, investigators have had an ongoing interest in the relationship between psychosocial risk factors and the epidemiologic and pathophysiologic features of coronary artery disease. In recent years, emphasis has shifted from attempting to predict the development of coronary artery disease in healthy subjects to evaluating the influence of psychosocial factors on secondary events, health-care costs, and survival in patients with established coronary artery disease.