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- 1From: Journal of Human Hypertension. (Vol. 19, Issue 7) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): N C Tan [1]; L W Khin [2]; R Pagi [1] Hypertension and its related cardiovascular complications such as ischaemic heart disease and cerebrovascular disease are the second and fourth principal causes of...
- 2From: Journal of Human Hypertension. (Vol. 19, Issue 7) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): F Yamasaki [1]; T Furuno [2]; K Sato [2]; D Zhang [3]; M Nishinaga [2]; T Sato [3]; Y Doi [2]; T Sugiura [1] Platelet activation and aggregation are important triggers of thrombotic events in patients with...
- 3From: Journal of Human Hypertension. (Vol. 19, Issue 7) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): S Ragot [1, 2]; P Sosner [3]; G Bouche [1]; J Guillemain [1]; D Herpin [3] Hypertension, one of the reversible risk factors leading to heart attacks and stroke is a public health problem in France, affecting...
- 4From: Journal of Human Hypertension. (Vol. 19, Issue 7) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): C M McEniery [1]; I B Wilkinson [1] Atherosclerosis remains the leading cause of death worldwide, and although the underlying pathophysiology is incompletely understood, it is increasingly viewed as an...
- 5From: Journal of Human Hypertension. (Vol. 19, Issue 7) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): G Parrinello [1]; A Licata [1]; D Colomba [1]; T Di Chiara [1]; C Argano [1]; P Bologna [1]; S Corrao [2]; G Avellone [1]; R Scaglione [1]; G Licata [1] Epidemiological and pathophysiological data indicate...
- 6From: Journal of Human Hypertension. (Vol. 19, Issue 7) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): J Lundkvist [1]; M Ekman [1]; B Kartman [2]; J Carlsson [3]; L Jönsson [1]; H Lithell [4] Stroke is the third most common cause of deathin the Western world, after cardiac disease and cancer.[1, 2] It is...
- 7From: Journal of Human Hypertension. (Vol. 19, Issue 7) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): I Z Ben-Dov [1]; L Ben-Arie [1]; J Mekler [1]; M Bursztyn [1] The upper limit of normal ambulatory blood pressure (ABP) is under debate. Based on correlations with clinic blood pressure (BP) of untreated...
- 8From: Journal of Human Hypertension. (Vol. 19, Issue 7) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): M J Hommels [1, 2]; A J A M van der Ven [3]; A A Kroon [1, 2]; A G H Kessels [4]; M P van Dieijen-Visser [5]; J A M van Engelshoven [6]; C A Bruggeman [2, 3]; P W de Leeuw [1, 2] Over the past decade several...
- 9From: Journal of Human Hypertension. (Vol. 19, Issue 7) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): D A Duprez [1]; P E Somasundaram [1]; G Sigurdsson [1]; L Hoke [1]; N Florea [1]; J N Cohn [1] The detection of preclinical disease of the artery wall may improve our ability to predict subsequent risk of...
- 10From: Journal of Human Hypertension. (Vol. 19, Issue 7) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): S Nomura [1]; A Shouzu [2]; S Omoto [2]; M Nishikawa [2]; T Iwasaka [2] Type 2 diabetes mellitus increases the risk of cardiovascular disease, [1, 2] and recently, blood pressure as well as glycaemic control...
- 11From: Journal of Human Hypertension. (Vol. 19, Issue 7) Peer-ReviewedHigh leptin levels are often observed in human obesity and are implicated in obesity-related hypertension. Leptin levels have been found to be higher in hypertensive obese African-American women compared to normotensive...
- 12From: Journal of Human Hypertension. (Vol. 19, Issue 7) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): C J Boos [1]; G Y H Lip [1] Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is currently the leading cause of death and disability in the developed world, and will soon overtake infectious disease as the pre-eminent cause of...