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Erin D. Michos

Erin D. Michos is a cardiologist at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine.[12]She specializes in medicine and preventive cardiology.[34]She is a member of Prevention of Heart Disease and Prevention of Cardiovascular Disease.[54]

Erin Michos is a cardiologist and associate professor of medicine at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine with a joint appointment in epidemiology at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.[6]She is associate director of preventive cardiology at the school's Ciccarone Center for the Prevention of Heart Disease.[7]As a marathon runner, she practices what she preaches.[8]She co-authored an editorial accompanying the study, which was published online July 25 in the journal Circulation.[9]

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Johns Hopkins School of Medicine

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Recent events

What doctors wish you knew about vitamins

Surprise, surprise: vitamin supplements had little impact on heart conditions, including heart disease, and lifespan as a whole. According to Dr. Erin D. Michos, associate professor of medicine in cardiology at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine and one of the paper's co-authors, the paper was catalyzed in part by the growing popularity of the supplement industry. "An estimated 1 out of 2 Americans are taking some kind of supplement or vitamin," Michos said.[16]

08/10/2019

Event Date

Vitamin devotees should shift to lifestyle changes, experts say

Take an iron supplement. Classic vitamin D deficiency. But a recent paper related to cardiovascular health, published this month in Annals of Internal Medicine, put this loyalty to the test. According to Dr Erin Michos, associate professor of medicine in cardiology at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine and one of the paper's co-authors, the paper was catalysed in part by the growing popularity of the supplement industry. "An estimated one out of two Americans are taking some kind of supplement or vitamin," Michos said.[15]

07/29/2019

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Women with a more masculine hormonal profile after menopause have a higher risk of heart disease

A higher proportion of male sex hormones than women in women after menopause increases the risk of cardiovascular disease, according to a study published today by Johns Hopkins University . This is the new finding of a study of more than 2,800 women who argue that, because of the drastic drop in female hormones that occurs after menopause, the risk of heart attacks or strokes increases, as the proportion of male hormones equals or is greater. Given that this disproportion between the main male sex hormone-testosterone-and the main female hormone-estrogen-can affect the risk of cardiovascular disease, the researchers advise in the near future to add hormonal tests to the tests that are performed to detect risk factor's. & # 8220; It is too early to recommend to all doctors to measure hormone levels, but it is something that should be considered in the future as it is to check cholesterol or blood pressure, then see how we can reduce this risk & # 8221; says Erin Michos, professor of medicine at Johns Hopkins University.[1314]

05/30/2018

Event Date

References

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    Women with a more masculine hormonal profile after menopause have a higher risk of heart disease2018-05-30