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Wellens' syndrome is an electrocardiographic manifestation of critical proximal left anterior descending (LAD) coronary artery stenosis in people with unstable angina. Originally thought of as two separate types, A and B, it is now considered an evolving wave form, initially of biphasic T wave inversions and later becoming symmetrical, often ...
Mark E. Josephson (1943-2017) was an American cardiologist and writer, who was in the 1970s one of the American pioneers of the medical cardiology subspecialty of cardiac electrophysiology. His book titled Clinical Cardiac Electrophysiology: Techniques and Interpretations is widely acknowledged as the definitive treatment of the discipline.
Wellens was known among European cardiologists as "the giant of Maastricht" and for many years was associated with the University of Limburg School of Medicine in Maastricht, Netherlands. [1] At his department of cardiology, many future clinical cardiac electrophysiologists trained from 1976 until his retirement in 2002.
Aerial view, looking towards the west, taken Friday, March 29, 2002 in Lexington. In the lower left at the intersection of Nicholasville and Reynolds Roads is an Arby’s restaurant that has been ...
Henry Earl, who has been arrested 969 times since 1992, mostly for alcohol intoxication, has become a cult hero on the internet, Fayette County Detention Center, Lexington, Ky., Tuesday, December ...
Wellens' sign or warning: Hein Wellens: cardiology: severe stenosis of LAD: characteristic ekg changes Wernicke encephalopathy: Carl Wernicke: neurology, psychiatry: thiamine deficiency: neurological symptoms caused by biochemical lesions of the central nervous system after exhaustion of B-vitamin reserves, in particular thiamine: Wernicke ...
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Samuel Theobald, M.D., a physician on the hospital staff, and a member of the faculty of Transylvania University Medical School in Lexington, wrote a dissertation in 1828 arguing that the goal of the hospital was "the custodial care of the insane and the protection of society. Most of the lunatics admitted were incurable cases, as non-violent ...