Jose R. Romero
Boston University
332 Papers
1.1K Citations
Jose R. Romero is an academic researcher from Boston University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Internal medicine. The author has an hindex of 53, co-authored 268 publications. Previous affiliations of Jose R. Romero include University of Nebraska Medical Center & University of Nebraska–Lincoln.
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Papers
Caveolin 1 Modulates Aldosterone-Mediated Pathways of Glucose and Lipid Homeostasis.
Rene Baudrand,Rene Baudrand,Nidhi Gupta,Amanda E Garza,Anand Vaidya,Jane A. Leopold,Paul N. Hopkins,Xavier Jeunemaitre,Claudio Ferri,Jose R. Romero,Jonathan S. Williams,Joseph Loscalzo,Gail K. Adler,Gordon H. Williams,Luminita H. Pojoga +14 more
TL;DR: The findings in mice and humans suggested that decreased cav‐1 expression may activate the effect of aldosterone/MR signaling on several pathways of glycemia, dyslipidemia, and resistin.
Temporal Trends in Ischemic Stroke Incidence in Younger Adults in the Framingham Study.
Hugo J. Aparicio,Jayandra J. Himali,Claudia L. Satizabal,Claudia L. Satizabal,Matthew P. Pase,Matthew P. Pase,Jose R. Romero,Carlos S. Kase,Carlos S. Kase,Alexa S. Beiser,Sudha Seshadri,Sudha Seshadri +11 more
TL;DR: Long-term rates of ischemic stroke declined in the authors' community sample; the decline was greater in older as compared with younger adults.
Mutations in a conserved enteroviral RNA oligonucleotide sequence affect positive strand viral RNA synthesis.
S. Willian,S. Tracy,Nora M. Chapman,S. Leser,Jose R. Romero,Bruce A. Shapiro,Kathleen M. Currey +6 more
TL;DR: The biological data are consistent with a hypothesis that proposes a lesion with primary effects at the level of positive strand viral RNA synthesis that results in attenuation of viral replication at physiologic temperature.
Toward Testing the Hypothesis that Group B Coxsackieviruses (CVB) Trigger Insulin-Dependent Diabetes: Inoculating Nonobese Diabetic Mice with CVB Markedly Lowers Diabetes Incidence
Steven Tracy,Kristen M. Drescher,Nora M. Chapman,K.-S. Kim,Steven D. Carson,Samuel J. Pirruccello,Pascale H. Lane,Jose R. Romero,J. S. Leser +8 more
TL;DR: Data do not support the hypothesis that CVB are causative agents of T1D, and to the contrary, CVB infections provide significant protection from T 1D onset in NOD mice.
MRI-Visible Perivascular Spaces and Risk of Incident Dementia
Jose R. Romero,Adlin Pinheiro,Hugo J. Aparicio,Charles DeCarli,Serkalem Demissie,Sudha Seshadri +5 more
TL;DR: Higher burden of PVS in CSO was associated with increased risk of developing dementia, independent of vascular risk factors, Total brain and white matter hyperintensity volumes and covert infarcts, and this finding supports a role for PVS as a subclinical MRI marker to identify individuals in subclinical stages at high risk of developed dementia who may benefit from early intervention.