All Stories

  1. TAB1-Induced Autoactivation of p38α Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase Is Crucially Dependent on Threonine 185
  2. Cardiac troponins: from myocardial infarction to chronic disease
  3. Quantifying the Release of Biomarkers of Myocardial Necrosis from Cardiac Myocytes and Intact Myocardium
  4. Temporal Relationship between Cardiac Myosin-Binding Protein C and Cardiac Troponin I in Type 1 Myocardial Infarction
  5. Troponins and other biomarkers in the early diagnosis of acute myocardial infarction
  6. The case for inhibiting p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase in heart failure
  7. Ischaemic postconditioning: cardiac protection after the event
  8. Myocardial Remodelling after Myocardial Infarction
  9. Future treatment strategies in ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction
  10. Test of the open artery hypothesis
  11. p38 mitogen activated protein kinase. Do we need a new therapeutic strategy?
  12. Troponins: Redefining their limits
  13. Constitutive glycogen synthase kinase-3α/β activity protects against chronic β-adrenergic remodelling of the heart
  14. Feeling the stress: MAPKKK-MAPKK-MAPK signaling cascades in heart failure
  15. Cyclin towards infarction!
  16. Potential of p38-MAPK inhibitors in the treatment of ischaemic heart disease
  17. Exercise training with ischaemia: is warming up the key?
  18. The use of proteomics to identify novel therapeutic targets for the treatment of disease
  19. ADMAring Endothelial Progenitor Cells
  20. Exercise-induced ischemia initiates the second window of protection in humans independent of collateral recruitment
  21. Detrimental effects of late aterey opening: Reply
  22. Stress-activated signals and their role in myocardial ischemia
  23. Late intervention after anterior myocardial infarction: effects on left ventricular size, function, quality of life, and exercise tolerance
  24. Systemic inflammation in unstable angina is the result of myocardial necrosis
  25. Acute myocardial infarction: patent or die?
  26. The origin and significance of the inflammatory response in unstable angina Michael R. Cusack, Michael S. Marber, Simon R. Redwood. St. Thomas' Hospital, London, United Kingdom
  27. Therapeutic potential of ischaemic preconditioning
  28. The open artery hypothesis: Potential mechanisms of action
  29. Ischemic Preconditioning in Isolated Cells
  30. The open artery hypothesis: Potential mechanisms of action
  31. Myocardial hibernation and stunning: from physiological principles to clinical practice
  32. Stress proteins: a future role in cardioprotection?
  33. Angina reassessed: pain or protector?
  34. Myocardial Stress Response, Cytoprotective Proteins and the Second Window of Protection Against Infarction
  35. Is warm-up in angina ischaemic preconditioning?
  36. Stress Proteins and Myocardial Protection
  37. Stress Proteins, Heat Stress, and Myocardial Protection
  38. Ischaemic preconditioning
  39. Hypoxic preconditioning of ischaemic myocardium