Eric B. Williamson
University of Minnesota
5 Papers
86 Citations
Eric B. Williamson is an academic researcher from University of Minnesota. The author has contributed to research in topics: Brachial artery & Internal medicine. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 5 publications. Previous affiliations of Eric B. Williamson include University of Michigan.
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Papers
Endothelial Function in Young Adult Survivors of Childhood Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia
Donald R. Dengel,Kirsten K. Ness,Stephen P. Glasser,Eric B. Williamson,K. Scott Baker,James G. Gurney +5 more
TL;DR: Young adults treated for ALL during childhood are at risk for impaired FMD regardless of whether or not they received cranial irradiation, according to high-resolution ultrasound of the brachial artery.
63
•Journal Article
Noninvasive measurements of arterial stiffness: repeatability and interrelationships with endothelial function and arterial morphology measures.
Corey J. Huck,Ulf G. Bronas,Eric B. Williamson,Christopher C. Draheim,Daniel Duprez,Donald R. Dengel,Donald R. Dengel +6 more
TL;DR: The three noninvasive modalities to study arterial stiffness reliably measures arterials stiffness however, they do not correlate with ultrasound measures of vascular function and structure in young and apparently healthy subjects.
Automated edge detection versus manual edge measurement in analysis of brachial artery reactivity: a comparison study.
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compared two edge detection methods for measuring vascular function and structure using the same ultrasound B-mode image, using the Bland-Altman plots to compare the two methods.
16
Examining the time course of endothelium-independent dilation by nitroglycerin.
TL;DR: The results of this study indicate that maximal EID occurs approximately five minutes after NTG administration, which likely underestimates the true dilation capacity of the artery.
14
Comparison of changes in heart rate variability and blood pressure during nitroglycerin administration and head-up tilt testing.
Tyler A. Bosch,Chris L. Kaufman,Eric B. Williamson,Daniel Duprez,Donald R. Dengel,Donald R. Dengel +5 more
TL;DR: Nitroglycerin administration and HUT caused significantly different changes in HRV over a ten-minute average, however nitroglycer in produced its maximal effect on HRV during the 5th and 6th minutes, which was similar to the effect caused by HUT at the same time.