Robyn L. McClelland
University of Washington
337 Papers
1.7K Citations
Robyn L. McClelland is an academic researcher from University of Washington. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Population. The author has an hindex of 76, co-authored 297 publications. Previous affiliations of Robyn L. McClelland include Los Angeles Biomedical Research Institute & University of Rochester.
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Papers
Comparison of Novel Risk Markers for Improvement in Cardiovascular Risk Assessment in Intermediate-Risk Individuals
Joseph Yeboah,Robyn L. McClelland,Tamar S. Polonsky,Gregory L. Burke,Christopher T. Sibley,Daniel H. O'Leary,J. Jeffrey Carr,David C. Goff,Philip Greenland,David M. Herrington +9 more
TL;DR: Coronary artery calcium provided superior discrimination and risk reclassification compared with other risk markers and was independent predictors of incident CHD/CVD in intermediate-risk individuals.
1.1K
Coronary artery calcium score and risk classification for coronary heart disease prediction.
Tamar S. Polonsky,Robyn L. McClelland,Neal W. Jorgensen,Diane E. Bild,Gregory L. Burke,Alan D. Guerci,Philip Greenland +6 more
TL;DR: In this multi-ethnic cohort, addition of CACS to a prediction model based on traditional risk factors significantly improved the classification of risk and placed more individuals in the most extreme risk categories.
Validation of a new coma scale: The FOUR score
Eelco F. M. Wijdicks,William R. Bamlet,Boby V. Maramattom,Edward M. Manno,Robyn L. McClelland +4 more
TL;DR: A new coma score, the FOUR (Full Outline of UnResponsiveness) score, which provides greater neurological detail than the GCS, recognizes a locked‐in syndrome, and is superior to the G CS due to the availability of brainstem reflexes, breathing patterns, and the ability to recognize different stages of herniation.
1K
Distribution of Coronary Artery Calcium by Race, Gender, and Age Results from the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis (MESA)
TL;DR: There were significant differences in calcium by race, and these associations differed across age and gender; the information provided here can be used to examine whether a patient has a high CAC score relative to others with the same age, gender, and race/ ethnicity who do not have clinical cardiovascular disease or treated diabetes.
871
Complex regional pain syndrome type I: incidence and prevalence in Olmsted county, a population-based study
TL;DR: CRPS I is of low prevalence, more commonly affects women than men, the upper more than the lower extremity, and three out of four cases undergo resolution, suggesting that invasive treatment of CRPS may not be warranted in the majority of cases.
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