Peter Nikutta
Hannover Medical School
22 Papers
231 Citations
Peter Nikutta is an academic researcher from Hannover Medical School. The author has contributed to research in topics: Coronary artery disease & Angiography. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 22 publications.
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Papers
Anatomical progression of coronary artery disease in humans as seen by prospective, repeated, quantitated coronary angiography. Relation to clinical events and risk factors. The INTACT Study Group.
TL;DR: In patients with mild to moderate CAD, the angiographic progression is slow but exceeds regression, and is predominantly seen in the formation of new coronary stenoses and less in growth of preexisting ones.
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Progression of coronary artery disease is dependent on anatomic location and diameter
Stefan Jost,Jaap W. Deckers,Jaap W. Deckers,Peter Nikutta,Wolfgang Rafflenbeul,Birgitt Wiese,Hartmut Hecker,Peter Lippolt,Paul R. Lichtlen +8 more
TL;DR: Progression of coronary artery disease occurs most frequently in coronary segments that are > 2 mm in diameter, in a proximal or midartery position and in the right coronary artery.
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Circadian variation of myocardial ischemia in patients with stable coronary artery disease.
TL;DR: The circadian variation of myocardial ischemia detected during 24-h ambulatory electrocardiographic monitoring (AEM) was analyzed in 123 patients with stable angina pectoris, positive exercise test, and angiographically proven coronary artery disease, to provide further insight into the pathomechanisms of acute clinical events in patients with coronary arteries disease.
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Circadian distribution of the characteristics of ischemic episodes in patients with stable coronary artery disease.
Dirk Hausmann,Peter Nikutta,Hans-Joachim Trappe,Werner G. Daniel,Paul Wenzlaff,Paul R. Lichtlen +5 more
TL;DR: The circadian variation in ischemic activity is predominantly based on a comparable variation in myocardial oxygen requirements, and is paralleled by a similar circadian variation of heart rate.
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Evolution of coronary stenoses is related to baseline severity—a prospective quantitative angiographic analysis in patients with moderate coronary disease
Stefan Jost,Jaap W. Deckers,Peter Nikutta,Birgitt Wiese,Rafflenbeul W,Hartmut Hecker,Peter Lippolt,P. R. Lichtlen +7 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors showed a significant correlation of the changes in minimal diameter with baseline % diameter stenosis (r = 0.30; P < 0.001), minimal diameter, and reference diameter of stenoses.
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