Is silent ischemia on the routine admission ECG an important finding?. Bridges, S., Hollowell, J., Stagg, S., Kemle, K., Nusynowitz, M., Allensworth, D., Pryor, D., & Moorman, J. j-JE, 26(2):131–136, 1993.
bibtex   
@Article{RSM:Bri93,
  author =       "S.L. Bridges and J.S. Hollowell and S.W. Stagg and
                 K.A. Kemle and M.L. Nusynowitz and D.C. Allensworth and
                 D.B. Pryor and J.R. Moorman",
  title =        "Is silent ischemia on the routine admission {ECG} an
                 important finding?",
  journal =      j-JE,
  year =         "1993",
  volume =       "26",
  number =       "2",
  pages =        "131--136",
  robnote =      "This could be an important paper for the ST monitoring
                 project. Looks at outcomes for patients with only small
                 ECG signs of ischemia, but risk factors for CAD,
                 against those who have risk factors but no ECG signs.
                 They find that those with some sign of ECG abnormality
                 (and they hypothesize, silent ischemia) do much worse
                 than their counterparts who have same risk profile but
                 no ECG abnormalities.",
}

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