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Joseph E. Schwartz

Researcher at Stony Brook University

Publications -  689
Citations -  53561

Joseph E. Schwartz is an academic researcher from Stony Brook University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Blood pressure & Ambulatory blood pressure. The author has an hindex of 108, co-authored 640 publications receiving 47880 citations. Previous affiliations of Joseph E. Schwartz include Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center & State University of New York System.

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Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitoring and All-Cause Mortality in Elderly People With Diabetes Mellitus

TL;DR: Ambulatory monitoring improved the prediction of risk through its assessment of sleep HR dipping and of ambulatory arterial stiffness index, a measure of the dynamic relationship between systolic and diastolic BPs.
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Somatic symptoms in women 11 years after the Chornobyl accident: prevalence and risk factors.

TL;DR: The results confirm the persistence and nonspecificity of the subjective medical consequences of Chornobyl and are consistent with the hypothesis that traumatic events exert their greatest negative impacts on health in vulnerable or disadvantaged groups.
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30-month stability of personality disorder diagnoses in depressed outpatients.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the 30-month stability of axis II conditions in depressed outpatients and found that the diagnostic stability of personality disorders ranged from low to moderate at categorical level and was generally moderate at the dimensional level.
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Cornell Product Left Ventricular Hypertrophy in Electrocardiogram and the Risk of Stroke in a General Population

TL;DR: CP-LVH is related to glucose abnormality, and its predictive value for stroke is seen even in normotensives and prehypertensives, and in all of the hypertensive subgroups, the c-statistic for the equation predicting stroke increased when CP-LVh was added to the model but not when SL- LVH was added.
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Nocturnal Blood Pressure Elevation Predicts Progression of Albuminuria in Elderly People With Type 2 Diabetes

TL;DR: Nocturnal BP rise on ambulatory monitoring is superior to office BP to predict worsening of albuminuria in elderly individuals with type 2 diabetes and adds to the information provided by 24‐hour pulse pressure.