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Roger S. Blumenthal, MD

Ciccarone Center Research

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Roger S. Blumenthal, MD

Roger S. Blumenthal, MD
Blumenthal, Roger S., MD

Roger S. Blumenthal, MD is Director of the Johns Hopkins Ciccarone Center for the Prevention of Heart Disease and a Professor of Medicine.

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Landmark Articles

Low HDL cholesterol but not high LDL cholesterol is independently associated with subclinical coronary atherosclerosis in healthy octogenarians.

By: Freitas WM, Quaglia LA, Santos SN, de Paula RC, Santos RD, Blaha M, Rivera JJ, Cury R, Blumenthal R, Nadruz-Junior W, Agatston A, Figueiredo VN, Nasir K, Sposito AC; The Brazilian Study on Healthy Aging.

In a healthy cohort of individuals aged of 80 years or more the association between LDL-C and coronary atherosclerosis weakens with aging, while the opposite occurs with the levels of HDL-C.

New insights into diagnostic testing guidelines in women.

By: Metkus Jr. TS, Blumenthal RS, Joshi PH.

An update to the 2005 Guidelines on the Role of Noninvastive Testing in the Clinical Evaluation of Women with Suspected Ischemic Heart Disease was authored in response to the documented gap in appropriate diagnosis and treatment of ischemic heart disease between women and men.

Non-cardiovascular effects associated with statins.

By: Desai CS, Martin SS, Blumenthal RS.
This is a state-of-art review on the possible effects of statin therapy on organs not in the cardiovascular system.

Cigarette smoking worsens systemic inflammation in persons with metabolic syndrome.

By: Jamal O, Aneni EC, Shaharyar S, Ali SS, Parris D, McEvoy JW, Veledar E, Blaha MJ, Blumenthal RS, Agatston AS, Coceicao RD, Feldman T, Carvalho JA, Santos RD, Nasir K.

Emerging data suggests that the combination of smoking and metabolic syndrome (MetS) markedly increases cardiovascular disease risk well beyond that of either condition. In this study we assess if this interaction can be explained by an additive increase in the risk of systemic inflammation by MetS and cigarette smoking. The study demonstrates an additive effect of cigarette smoking on the risk of systemic inflammation in MetS thus highlighting the need for determining smoking status among those with MetS and aggressively targeting smoking cessation in this population.

Headed in the right direction but at risk for miscalculation: a critical appraisal of the 2013 ACC/AHA risk assessment guideline.

By: Amin NP, Martin SS, Blaha MJ, Nasir K, Blumenthal RS, Michos ED.
The newly released 2013 ACC/AHA Guideline for Assessing Cardiovascular Risk was a major advance over prior guidelines, but the new risk equations do not appear to lead to significantly better discrimination than older models. Since the same risk factors are incorporated, using the new risk estimators may lead to inaccurate assessment of atherosclerotic cardiovascular risk in certain groups of patients. There also is likely an overestimation of risk when applied to modern populations. Future guidelines could provide clearer direction on which individuals would benefit from additional testing for more personalized preventive therapies.

2013 American cholesterol treatment guideline: what was done well and what could be done better.

By: Martin SS, Abd TT, Jones SR, Michos ED, Blumenthal RS, Blaha MJ.
This article critically appraises the 2013 ACC/AHA Guideline on the Treatment of Blood Cholesterol. The guideline succeeds in prioritizing statin therapy, expanding focus to atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease including stroke, and in emphasizing absolute cardiovascular risk to determine statin eligibility.

Associations of Pentraxin 3 with cardiovascular disease: The Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis.

By: Jenny NS, Blumenthal RS, Kronmal RA, Rotter JI, Siscovick DS, Psaty BM.
In a study of apparently healthy adults, Pentraxin 3 was associated with CVD risk factors, subclinical CVD, CAC and incident coronary heart disease events independent of C-reactive protein (CRP) and CVD risk factors. These results support the hypothesis that PTX3 reflects different aspects of inflammation than CRP and may provide additional insight into the development and progression of atherosclerosis.

CPAP versus oxygen in obstructive sleep apnea.

By: Gottlieb DJ, Punjabi NM, Mehra R, Patel SR, Quan SF, Babineau DC, Tracy RP, Rueschman M, Blumenthal RS, Lewis EF, Bhatt DL, Redline S.
In patients with cardiovascular disease or multiple CVD risk factors, the treatment of obstructive sleep apnea with continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP), but not nocturnal supplemental oxygen, resulted in a significant reduction in blood pressure.

Letter regarding article, “Taking a longer term view of cardiovascular risk: the causal exposure paradigm.”

By: Joshi PH, Blaha MJ, Martin SS, Blumenthal RS.

The fascinating story of PCSK9 Inhibition: Insights and perspective from ACC.14.

By: Joshi PH, Martin SS, Blumenthal RS.

The development of PCSK9 inhibitors is coming along at a unique point in the realm of preventive cardiology from multiple perspectives.