Publications by authors named "K A Kyrkou"

Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is a rising problem, with important implications for public health. Recent evidence has revealed a link between OSA and reduced male fertility. We investigated the association between OSA and sexual and erectile function, as well as semen quality, and the effect of treatment by continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP).

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Introduction: Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is associated with increased cardiovascular morbidity and mortality attributed to both classical risk factors and chronic inflammation. We assessed longitudinally the factors associated with new carotid plaques in nondiabetic RA patients and apparently healthy individuals.

Methods: In our present prospective observational study, carotid plaques were identified by ultrasonography at baseline and follow-up end, separated by an average of 3.

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Purpose: To evaluate the treatment results of radiofrequency ablation (RFA) for primary and metastatic malignant liver tumours in challenging locations and also to present the treatment strategy that was used in these cases.

Patients And Methods: From January 2007 to January 2010, we performed CT-guided RFA on 528 lesions in 402 patients (265 men and 137 women; mean age 65.1 years, range 19-82 years) with liver tumours (primary and metastatic) of which 98 lesions in 84 patients (55 men and 29 women; mean age 67.

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Objective: To compare the prevalence of subclinical atherosclerosis between postmenopausal women and men of similar age early after the onset of menopause.

Methods: In the first part of this cross-sectional study 186 non-diabetic young postmenopausal women (n = 101, menopausal age ≤ 10 years) and men (n = 85) aged 40-60 years without overt CVD were consecutively recruited from the outpatients clinics of an academic hospital. Subclinical carotid atherosclerosis was assessed by high-resolution ultrasonography.

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Background: Hyperprolactinemia has been recently associated with hypertension and endothelial dysfunction in humans, confirming animal studies performed in the 1970s that showed high prolactin levels to exert positive chronotropic and vasoconstrictive effects. Whether prolactin affects endothelial function, in the absence of hyperprolactinemia, remains unknown. Considering that secretion of prolactin presents circadian rhythmicity, we tested the hypothesis that in patients with hypertension, who present diurnal variation in their endothelial function as well, prolactin levels correlate with endothelial function and/or blood pressure.

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