Publications by authors named "I T Sulea"

Article Synopsis
  • Long-term outcomes of cardiovascular diseases in Eastern Europe, specifically in a Romanian PCI registry, were assessed, focusing on ethnic minorities like Hungarians and Roma.
  • The study analyzed data from 6,867 patients over a median follow-up of 3.60 years, revealing a total of 1,064 cardiovascular-related deaths and 1,374 all-cause deaths, with ethnic minorities experiencing higher mortality rates.
  • Findings indicated significantly worse long-term survival rates for Hungarian and Roma patients compared to the Romanian population, highlighting disparities in health outcomes among these groups.
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Out-of-hospital mortality in coronary artery disease (CAD) is particularly high and established adverse event prediction tools are yet to be available. Our study aimed to investigate whether precision phenotyping can be performed using routine laboratory parameters for the prediction of out-of-hospital survival in a CAD population treated by percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). All patients treated by PCI and discharged alive in a tertiary center between January 2016 - December 2022 that have been included prospectively in the local registry were analyzed.

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The aim of this work was to determine the normal values of erythro-, leuko-, and thrombocytes in several groups of population situated in various geographic areas (hills, plain, sea-side), considering that such data could be useful for the delimitation between the normal conditions and the near-normal ones. Sixteen hematologic parameters have been investigated in 2,053 healthy subjects, insisting particularly on those most frequently required in the clinic, i.e.

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A search has been made for corynebacterial phospholipase D, "ovis toxin," a sphingomyelinase (phosphatidylcholine phosphohydrolase, EC 3.1.4.

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When rabbits were given intramuscular injections of the same quantities of human leukocyte or fibroblast interferons, the former produced moderately higher levels of circulating interferon. Fibroblast interferon was not cleared faster from circulation, nor was direct inactivation by rabbit blood responsible for this difference.

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