Niamh Hynes
Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland
181 Papers
851 Citations
Niamh Hynes is an academic researcher from Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Endovascular aneurysm repair. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 152 publications. Previous affiliations of Niamh Hynes include University College Hospital & National University of Ireland, Galway.
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Papers
The effects of normalizing hyperhomocysteinemia on clinical and operative outcomes in patients with critical limb ischemia.
TL;DR: In this paper, a parallel observational study was conducted to compare the clinical and revascularization outcomes of patients who received standardized treatment for HHC preoperatively (folic acid and vitamin B12) vs contemporaneous patients with normal homocysteine levels.
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The contemporary design of endovascular aneurysm stent-graft materials: PTFE versus polyester
TL;DR: A comprehensive review is needed to elucidate the post-procedural outcome in EVAR and TEVAR in terms of endograft failure, cardiovascular events, and aortic-related mortality and morbidity.
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Is the Cardiovascular Specialist Ready For the Fifth Revolution? The Role of Artificial Intelligence, Machine Learning, Big Data Analysis, Intelligent Swarming, and Knowledge-Centered Service on the Future of Global Cardiovascular Healthcare Delivery.
Sherif Sultan,Yogesh Acharya,Omnia Zayed,Hesham Elzomour,Juan C. Parodi,O. Soliman,Niamh Hynes +6 more
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Endovascular repair of early rupture of Dacron aortic graft--two case reports.
TL;DR: Endovascular treatment of the postaortic open surgery (PAOS) patient has fewer complications and a lower mortality rate in comparison with redo open surgical repair, and highlights the crucial importance of endovascular grafts in the management of such complex vascular problems.
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Refractory neck pain due to Eagle syndrome.
TL;DR: A 64-year-old woman with Eagle syndrome, named after Watt W. Eagle, presented to the otolaryngology clinic with a slowly progressive intermittent dull pain in the upper neck of 10 years’ duration and had complete resolution of the symptoms postoperatively.
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