Temporal trends in CV risk factors among young acute #MI patients – is obesity becoming the worst villain?
https://t.co/qJm4nhEi3k #EHJQCCO#CVD #@cpgale3 @diogoasantosfer@m_piepoli
#OriginalResearch Loss of life expectancy due to MI is largest among younger individuals, females, and those with post-MI LVEF impairment @daviderlinge@karolinskainst https://t.co/3b5odJWpG0
Men who played #football (#soccer) in the Swedish top division until the mid 1900s had a higher risk of #dementia than men from the general population, a new study from KI researchers incl @PeterUeda1 and @dr_pasternak published in @TheLancetPH reports.
https://t.co/JduVpQyGKO
What an impressive study by @FrobertOle and colleagues with an NNT roughly 50 for the primary outcome (all-cause death, MI, or stent thrombosis at 12 months) this should change our current practice!
@skathire@rwyeh@CircAHA Maybe I remember wrong but weren’t the non-OAC treated many years older 77.5 vs 73.5, more female, more cancer history and had more coagulation disorders and higher PRECISE-DAPT score than the OAC treated? Thus not surprising that they had more bleeds.