2023 - Research.com Medicine in United States Leader Award
2022 - Research.com Best Scientist Award
2022 - Research.com Medicine in United States Leader Award
2009 - Population Research Prize, American Heart Association
Member of the American Society of Hypertension
Member of the Heart Failure Society of America
His primary areas of investigation include Internal medicine, Framingham Heart Study, Cardiology, Blood pressure and Risk factor. His research links Surgery with Internal medicine. His Framingham Heart Study study integrates concerns from other disciplines, such as Endocrinology, Cohort study, Proportional hazards model, Hazard ratio and Cohort.
His Cardiology research is multidisciplinary, incorporating perspectives in Stroke, Prospective cohort study, Left ventricular hypertrophy and Incidence. His Blood pressure research integrates issues from Genetics and Disease. The concepts of his Heart failure study are interwoven with issues in Survival rate and valvular heart disease.
Daniel Levy mostly deals with Internal medicine, Framingham Heart Study, Cardiology, Blood pressure and Framingham Risk Score. As part of his studies on Internal medicine, Daniel Levy often connects relevant subjects like Endocrinology. His Endocrinology research is multidisciplinary, incorporating elements of Odds ratio and Natriuretic peptide.
His Framingham Heart Study research incorporates themes from Body mass index, Epidemiology, Surgery, Cohort study and Hazard ratio. Daniel Levy interconnects Left ventricular hypertrophy, Diastole and Confidence interval in the investigation of issues within Cardiology. His Blood pressure study incorporates themes from Genetics, Genome-wide association study and Hemodynamics.
Internal medicine, Genetics, Framingham Heart Study, Genome-wide association study and DNA methylation are his primary areas of study. His studies deal with areas such as Endocrinology, Oncology and Cardiology as well as Internal medicine. Daniel Levy combines topics linked to Blood pressure with his work on Genetics.
His research investigates the connection between Framingham Heart Study and topics such as Physiology that intersect with problems in Waist. Daniel Levy studied Genome-wide association study and Genetic architecture that intersect with Computational biology. The DNA methylation study combines topics in areas such as Methylation and Epigenetics.
Daniel Levy focuses on Genetics, Genome-wide association study, Internal medicine, Framingham Heart Study and Genetic association. His Genome-wide association study research also works with subjects such as
His Obesity research extends to Cardiology, which is thematically connected. His research in Framingham Heart Study intersects with topics in Prospective cohort study, Cohort study, Physiology and Cohort. In his study, which falls under the umbrella issue of Disease, Risk factor is strongly linked to Blood pressure.
This overview was generated by a machine learning system which analysed the scientist’s body of work. If you have any feedback, you can contact us here.
Prediction of Coronary Heart Disease Using Risk Factor Categories
Peter W. F. Wilson;Ralph B. D’Agostino;Daniel Levy;Albert M. Belanger.
Circulation (1998)
Prognostic Implications of Echocardiographically Determined Left Ventricular Mass in the Framingham Heart Study
Daniel Levy;Robert J. Garrison;Daniel D. Savage;William B. Kannel.
The New England Journal of Medicine (1990)
Impact of Atrial Fibrillation on the Risk of Death The Framingham Heart Study
Emelia J. Benjamin;Philip A. Wolf;Ralph B. D’Agostino;Halit Silbershatz.
Circulation (1998)
2013 ACC/AHA Guideline on the Assessment of Cardiovascular Risk: A Report of the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association Task Force on Practice Guidelines
David C. Goff;Donald M. Lloyd-Jones;Glen Bennett;Sean Coady.
Journal of the American College of Cardiology (2014)
Independent risk factors for atrial fibrillation in a population-based cohort. The Framingham Heart Study.
Emelia J. Benjamin;Daniel Levy;Sonya M. Vaziri;Ralph B. D'Agostino.
JAMA (1994)
Is Pulse Pressure Useful in Predicting Risk for Coronary Heart Disease? The Framingham Heart Study
Stanley S. Franklin;Shehzad A. Khan;Nathan D. Wong;Martin G. Larson.
Circulation (1999)
Obesity and the Risk of Heart Failure
Satish Kenchaiah;Jane C Evans;Daniel Levy;Peter W F Wilson.
The New England Journal of Medicine (2002)
The epidemiology of heart failure : The Framingham Study
Kalon K.L. Ho;Joan L. Pinsky;William B. Kannel;Daniel Levy;Daniel Levy;Daniel Levy.
Journal of the American College of Cardiology (1993)
Impact of High-Normal Blood Pressure on the Risk of Cardiovascular Disease
Ramachandran S. Vasan;Martin G. Larson;Eric P. Leip;Jane C. Evans.
The New England Journal of Medicine (2001)
Myocardial infarction redefined - A consensus document of the Joint European Society of Cardiology/American College of Cardiology committee for the redefinition of myocardial infarction
J. S. Alpert;E. Antman;F. Apple;P. W. Armstrong.
European Heart Journal (2000)
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