Coronary Calcium Scoring
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found 34 articles for 0.347 sec
http://content.nejm.org/cgi/content/full/358/13/1394 The thoughtful clinician takes it to be self-evident that intensity of therapy should be proportional to risk of disease.1,2 Ever since Bigger coined the term "risk stratification" to characterize this intuitive process,3 more than 3000 articles (according to a recent PubMed literature search) have been published on the subject -- at a rate     

Group: alt.support.diabetes.uk · Group Profile · Search for Coronary Calcium Scoring in alt.support.diabetes.uk
Author: Andrew B. Chung, MD/PhD
Date: Mar 29, 2008 03:59

http://content.nejm.org/cgi/content/full/358/13/1394 The thoughtful clinician takes it to be self-evident that intensity of therapy should be proportional to risk of disease.1,2 Ever since Bigger coined the term "risk stratification" to characterize this intuitive process,3 more than 3000 articles (according to a recent PubMed literature search) have been published on the subject -- at a rate
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"In our collective clinical experience, the folks at Harvard are not correct except in folks who have lost all their VAT." Specifically, who is "our"? *** http://heartscanblog.blogspot.com/ Sunday, January 06, 2008 Is skinny necessary for reversal? Nothing we do in the Track Your Plaque program guarantees that coronary atherosclerotic plaque or your heart scan score is reduced or     

Group: alt.support.diabetes · Group Profile · Search for Coronary Calcium Scoring in alt.support.diabetes
Author: Andrew B. Chung, MD/PhD
Date: Mar 29, 2008 03:59

Return-Path: <spank275@yahoo.com> Delivered-To: spamcop-net-spamtrap@spamcop.net Received: (qmail 11537 invoked from network); 27 Jun 2008 13:30:07 -0000 Received: from pool-72-88-188-5.nwrknj.east.verizon.net (HELO Wilkerson) (72.88.188.5) by mx70.cesmail.net with SMTP; 27 Jun 2008 13:30:06 -0000 Content-Return: allowed X-Mailer: CME-V6.5.4.3; MSN Return-Path: communications_msn_cs_enus@cimail15
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By DENISE GRADY - June 17, 2008 (Ok, now I finally understand it. Good tailoring obscured the fact that he was very overweight...) Given the great strides that have been made in preventing and treating heart disease, what explains Tim Russert’s sudden death last week at 58 from a heart attack? The answer, at least in part, is that although doctors knew that Mr. Russert, the longtime moderator     

Group: alt.support.diabetes · Group Profile · Search for Coronary Calcium Scoring in alt.support.diabetes
Author: dsolo
Date: Jan 7, 2008 08:21

Jefferson <fwroy@adelphia.netexopheno> wrote in part: Hi Jim: http://heartscanblog.blogspot.com/ I've found some things (in the free parts) to be of interest, but I have reservations about the general approach. That approach is to undergo CT scans repeatedly to judge changes in calcification of the coronary arteries. There's a downside to that, both in radiation
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Jefferson <fwroy@adelphia.netexopheno> wrote in part: >Hi Jim: > >>>http://heartscanblog.blogspot.com/ >> >> >> I've found some things (in the free parts) to be of interest, but I have >> reservations about the general approach. That approach is to undergo CT >> scans repeatedly to judge changes in calcification of the coronary arteries. >> There's a downside to that, both in radiation     

Group: news.admin.netabuse.sightings · Group Profile · Search for Coronary Calcium Scoring in news.admin.netabuse.sightings
Author: Sam Trappe
Date: Jun 27, 2008 09:23

Jackie Patti <jpatti@ccil.org> wrote in part: Jim Chinnis wrote: dsolo <dalesolomonson@gmail.com> wrote in part: Wow... I stood and cheered: http://heartscanblog.blogspot.com/ I've found some things (in the free parts) to be of interest, but I have reservations about the general approach. That approach is to undergo CT scans repeatedly to judge changes in
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Susan <nevermind@nomail.com> wrote in part: >Right, and after years of surfing the literature, I'm very confident >that statins are more toxic than helpful and that there are non toxic >ways to reach those targets if you think you must. Here's one: > > >[Evaluation of the cholesterol-lowering effectiveness of pantethine in >women in perimenopausal age] etc... Pantethine may be effective     

Group: alt.fiftyplus.friends · Group Profile · Search for Coronary Calcium Scoring in alt.fiftyplus.friends
Author: Marian
Date: Jun 19, 2008 12:38

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Group: alt.messianic · Group Profile · Search for Coronary Calcium Scoring in alt.messianic
Author: Andrew B. Chung, MD/PhD
Date: Dec 22, 2007 10:32

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Group: alt.support.diabetes · Group Profile · Search for Coronary Calcium Scoring in alt.support.diabetes
Author: Jim Chinnis
Date: Oct 25, 2007 17:38

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Group: alt.support.diabetes · Group Profile · Search for Coronary Calcium Scoring in alt.support.diabetes
Author: Jim Chinnis
Date: Oct 23, 2007 20:13

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Group: alt.support.diabetes · Group Profile · Search for Coronary Calcium Scoring in alt.support.diabetes
Author: Jim Chinnis
Date: Oct 23, 2007 10:24

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Group: alt.support.diabetes · Group Profile · Search for Coronary Calcium Scoring in alt.support.diabetes
Author: Jim Chinnis
Date: Aug 22, 2007 08:31

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