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Why wire-dependent fractional flow reserve may soon be obsolete; stroke risk after a myocardial infarction goes on three times longer than previously thought; poststroke dual-antiplatelet therapy should be cut short; and emergency departments are seeing results from greater use of high-sensitivity troponin T in chest pain patients.
By MDedge4.9
1616 ratings
Why wire-dependent fractional flow reserve may soon be obsolete; stroke risk after a myocardial infarction goes on three times longer than previously thought; poststroke dual-antiplatelet therapy should be cut short; and emergency departments are seeing results from greater use of high-sensitivity troponin T in chest pain patients.