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期刊名:Annals of the american thoracic society

缩写:ANN AM THORAC SOC

ISSN:2329-6933

e-ISSN:2325-6621

IF/分区:6.0/Q1

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共收录本刊相关文章索引4636
Clinical Trial Case Reports Meta-Analysis RCT Review Systematic Review
Classical Article Case Reports Clinical Study Clinical Trial Clinical Trial Protocol Comment Comparative Study Editorial Guideline Letter Meta-Analysis Multicenter Study Observational Study Randomized Controlled Trial Review Systematic Review
Katie E Mosack,Cirila Estela Vasquez Guzman,Carolyn J Marentes Ruiz et al. Katie E Mosack et al.
Rationale: The exclusion of Spanish-speaking participants in psychobehavioral trials among critical illness survivors limits the generalizability of evidence-based interventions. However, adapting interventions for inclus...
Raichel M Alex,Le Li,Salma Batool-Anwar et al. Raichel M Alex et al.
Rationale: Advanced polysomnographic (PSG) metrics reflecting the physiological causes and consequences of sleep apnea may enable precision medicine in research settings, but their feasibility in routine clinical practice...
Judith A Tate,Mary Beth Happ,Stephanie Justice et al. Judith A Tate et al.
Rationale: The value of effective clinician-patient communication for patient safety and comfort is well-established, yet most ICU clinicians have little training and few resources to guide them in communication assessmen...
Yüksel Peker,Mustafa Saygin,Yeliz Celik et al. Yüksel Peker et al.
Rationale: Recent randomized controlled trials failed to show cardiovascular benefits of treating obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) in intention-to-treat analyses which has been a matter of debate since publication of the res...
Cecilia Castro-Diehl,Raichel Alex,Ali Azarbarzin et al. Cecilia Castro-Diehl et al.
Background: Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is a heterogeneous disease characterized by several endo-phenotypes (mechanistic traits and physiological severity metrics) and variable associations with excessive daytime sleepi...
Brian K Kirui,Huiqi Li,Oskar Wallström et al. Brian K Kirui et al.
Rationale: COPD exacerbations, often triggered by viral infections like COVID-19, are associated with increased cardiovascular risk. We hypothesized that COVID-19-related exacerbations carry higher short-term cardiovascul...