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Featured researches published by Alfred Soffer.
Heart | 1961
Alfred Soffer; Taft Toribara; Akgun Sayman
The phenomena of displacement and immobilization of calcium ions by chelation is being studied in an increasing number of clinical states. Chelation therapy in hypercalcmmia (Holland et al., 1953; Spencer et al., 1956), calcium deposition in coronary arteries (Meltzer et al., 1960) and peripheral vessels (Clarke et al., 1960) and in skin (Muller et al., 1959), and in the treatment of digitalis toxicity (Cohen et al., 1959) are under scrutiny and therefore careful analysis of the myocardial action of chelating drugs is warranted. In a 28-month study, 125 intravenous infusions of disodium ethylenediaminetetraacetate (disodium edathamil or EDTA) were administered to 58 subjects. Chelation produced four characteristic though occasionally variable responses of ventricular, atrial, and atrio-ventricular (A-V) junctional tissue: (1) suppression of ectopic ventricular beats and ventricular tachycardia, (2) slight slowing of the sino-atrial pacemaker, (3) improvement of A-V nodal conduction in first degree, second degree, and advanced heart block, and (4) increased automaticity of idioventricular pacemakers in complete heart block. Since the slowest effective rate of administration is the safest rate (Spencer et al., 1952), the total quantity of calcium chelated was determined for periods of administration varying from one-half to eleven hours.
JAMA Internal Medicine | 1986
Alfred Soffer
On July 1, 1976, I assumed the responsibility of editorial stewardship for theArchives. Chief editors of the specialty journals of the American Medical Association serve a maximum of ten years. Therefore, in keeping with the policy established by the American Medical Association, effective Dec 1, 1986, all manuscripts submitted to theArchivesshould be mailed to the new Editor of theArchives, James E. Dalen, MD. Dr Dalen is a distinguished investigator, teacher, and clinician. Raised in Seattle, he received his bachelor of science degree from Washington State University, Pullman. He obtained a masters degree in psychology from the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, before attending the University of Washington Medical School, Seattle. He concluded postgraduate studies in internal medicine and cardiology in Boston and began his teaching career at Harvard Medical School and the Peter Bent Brigham Hospital, Boston, in 1967. In 1974, he was named associate professor
JAMA Internal Medicine | 1961
Alfred Soffer
JAMA Internal Medicine | 1976
Alfred Soffer
JAMA Internal Medicine | 1960
Alfred Soffer; Taft Toribara; Dominic Moore-Jones; Donald Weber
JAMA Internal Medicine | 1976
Alfred Soffer
JAMA Internal Medicine | 1977
Alfred Soffer
JAMA Internal Medicine | 1982
Alfred Soffer
JAMA Internal Medicine | 1976
Alfred Soffer
JAMA Internal Medicine | 1985
Alfred Soffer