Daniel L. McGee
Florida State University
162 Papers
3K Citations
Daniel L. McGee is an academic researcher from Florida State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Framingham Heart Study. The author has an hindex of 73, co-authored 162 publications. Previous affiliations of Daniel L. McGee include National Institutes of Health & United States Department of Health and Human Services.
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Papers
Diabetes and Cardiovascular Disease: The Framingham Study
TL;DR: After adjustment for other associated risk factors, the relative impact of diabetes on CHD, IC, or stroke incidence was the same for women as for men; for CVD death and CHF, it was greater for women.
4K
Diabetes and cardiovascular risk factors: the Framingham study.
TL;DR: The role of diabetes as a cardiovascular risk factor does not derive from an altered ability to contend with known risk factors and there is no indication that the relationship of risk factors to the subsequent development of cardiovascular disease is different for diabetics and non-diabetics.
1.4K
Diabetes and Glucose Tolerance as Risk Factors for Cardiovascular Disease: The Framingham Study
WilliamB. Kannel,Daniel L. McGee +1 more
TL;DR: Present evidence suggests that alleviation of associated cardiovascular risk factors is the most promising course in reducing cardiovascular sequelae in diabetic patients.
1.3K
A general cardiovascular risk profile: the Framingham Study
TL;DR: The function provides an economic and efficient method of identifying persons at high cardiovascular risk who need preventive treatment and persons at low risk whoneed not be alarmed about one moderately elevated risk characteristic.
1.2K
Update on Some Epidemiologic Features of Intermittent Claudication: The Framingham Study
W B Kannel,Daniel L. McGee +1 more
TL;DR: A risk profile made up of the major cardiovascular risk factors was better for predicting IC than for predicting coronary heart disease, and mortality was increased two‐ to fourfold in men and women, respectively, mainly because of coexistent cardiovascular disease.
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