8
2013 Media Kit June 2012 Clinical Cardiology Volume 35 • Number 6 • Pages 321–382 Cover: An example of T2-weighted (fast spin echo triple inversion recovery sequence) image of a 51-year-old male with reduced function (left ventricular ejection fraction 34%) and enhanced signal intensity of the myocardium of the left ventricle. This provides evidence of myocardial edema. The arrows signify elevated signal intensity of the myocardium. From “Evidence of Myocardial Edema in Patients With Nonischemic Dilated Cardiomyopathy” by M. Jeserich, D. Föll, M. Olschewski, S. Kimmel, M.G. Friedrich, C. Bode, A. Geibel, in this issue on page 374. Reviews Electromagnetic Interference and Implanted Cardiac Devices: The Medical Environment (Part II) Cannabinoids and Atherosclerotic Coronary Heart Disease Clinical Investigations Clinical Characteristics, Sex Hormones, and Long-Term Follow-Up in Swiss Postmenopausal Women Presenting With Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy Erroneous Computer Electrocardiogram Interpretation of Atrial Fibrillation and Its Clinical Consequences Cocaine-Using Patients With a Normal or Nondiagnostic Electrocardiogram: Single-Photon Emission Computed Tomography Myocardial Perfusion Imaging and Outcome Effect of Telmisartan on Paroxysmal Atrial Fibrillation Recurrence in Hypertensive Patients With Normal or Increased Left Atrial Size JUNE2012VOL35 CLINICAL CARDIOLOGY Official Journal of The American Society for Preventive Cardiology www.clinical-cardiology.com Volume 23 • Number 7 • July 2012 ISSN:1045-3873 Impact on mortality of etiology of ICD shocks The cover illustration appears on page 738 John Wiley & Sons Inc. 350 Main Street Malden, MA 02148-5020 CHANGE SERVICE REQUESTED Included in ISI and Index Medicus/MEDLINE wileyonlinelibrary.com/journal/jch Comparative Effectiveness of Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme Inhibitors and Angiotensin Receptor Blockers for Hypertension on Clinical End Points: A Cohort Study Jason Roy, Nirav R. Shah, G. Craig Wood, Raymond Townsend, Sean Hennessy Does Response of RAS Blockade on Serum K+ Levels Influence Its Glycemic-Mitigating Response When Combined With Hydrochlorothiazide? Prakash C. Deedwania, Dion H. Zappe, Brent M. Egan, Das Purkayastha, Rita Samuel, James R. Sowers Aggressive Blood Pressure–Lowering Therapy Guided by Home Blood Pressure Monitoring Improves Target Organ Damage in Hypertensive Patients With Type 2 Diabetes/Prediabetes Kazuo Eguchi, Satoshi Hoshide, Shizukiyo Ishikawa, Kazuyuki Shimada, Kazuomi Kario Dietary Supplements and Hypertension: Potential Benefits and Precautions Carly B. Rasmussen, James K. Glisson, Deborah S. Minor Validation of a French Version of the 8-Item Morisky Medication Adherence Scale in Hypertensive Adults Virginie Korb-Savoldelli, Florence Gillaizeau, Jacques Pouchot, Emilie Lenain, Nicolas Postel-Vinay, Pierre-François Plouin, Pierre Durieux, Brigitte Sabatier Can Access Limits on Sales Representatives to Physicians Affect Clinical Prescription Decisions? A Study of Recent Events With Diabetes and Lipid Drugs George A. Chressanthis, Pratap Khedkar, Nitin Jain, Prashant Poddar, Michael G. Seiders A JOURNAL OF: HYPERTENSION DIABETES LIPIDS OBESITY Volume 14 Issue 7 July 2012 OFFICIAL JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF HYPERTENSION, INC Additional Contents Within THE OFFICIAL JOURNAL OF THE WORLD SOCIETY OF ARRHYTHMIA PACE Volume 35, No. 6, Pages 639–772 June 2012 JUNE 2012 VOLUME 35 NUMBER 6 639 Active Fixation Coronary Sinus Leads by Kalahasty and Ellenbogen 641 Multicenter Experience with TLE of Active Fixation CS Leads by Maytin, et al. 648 Editorial by Kay and Ellenbogen 650 Lessons from ICD Lead Recalls by Hauser 652 Sprint Fidelis and Riata Defibrillator Leads by Van Rees, et al. 659 Predisposing Factors for Fidelis Fractures by Bernstein, et al. 665 Recalled Lead Revision Complications by Brumberg, et al. 672 Questionnaire on ICD Therapy by Sadarmin, et al. 681 ICDs and Bioimpedance Testing by Buch, et al. 685 PMO in CRT Nonresponders by Gage et al. 695 Persistent AF, AV Block, and DDD Pacingby Petrac ˇ, et al. 703 Dialysis MTWAby Green, et al. 711 Radiofrequency vs Cryoablation Efficacy by Buddhe, et al. 718 Simulation of Clinical Electrophysiological Study by Zhu, et al. 730 Electrogram Attenuation during Robotic Ablation by Duncan, et al. 739 Hemodynamic Evaluation in Vasovagal Syncope by Nigro, et al. 749 PVC Algorithm Inducing Ventricular Fibrillation by El-Damaty, et al. 752 Ventricular Pacing at Maximal Sensor Rate by Koneru, et al. 754 The Road Ends in Detroit by Olshansky 757 Diagnostic SVT Pacing Maneuvers 2 by Veenhuyzen, et al. e149 Coronary Sinus Lead Fragmentation and Migration by Arias, et al. e150 Monitoring ICD Lead Insulation Failure by Gelder and Gunderson e154 Riata Lead Failure by Leong and Van Erven e156 Early Abrasions of Silicone Endocardial Leads by Zabek, et al. e159 An Unusual Case of Electromagnetic Interference by Anderson, et al. e163 Radiofrequency EMI by Vanga, et al. e167 Complications of an ICDby Kwon, et al. e170 Alternate Current Inducing Ventricular Tachycardia by Lappegård e173 SQ-Array and Azygos Vein Lead by Yamada, et al. e177 Laptop Interference with ICD by Tiikkaja, et al. e179 Defibrillation Threshold Testing Implantable Defibrillators by Nageh 770 Letters to the Editor John Wiley & Sons Inc. 350 Main Street Malden, MA 02148-5020 CHANGE SERVICE REQUESTED wileyonlinelibrary.com/journal/chf IN THIS ISSUE: Body Mass Index and 25 Hydroxyvitamin D Status in Patients With and Without Heart Failure Christina DiCarlo, BA; Brian Schmotzer, MS; Marianne Vest, MS, RN; Rebecca Boxer, MD Review of Ambulatory Pulmonary Artery Catheterization in the Management of Advanced Heart Failure Sharayne Mark, MD; Pedro Calderon-Artero, MD; Lisa Kakinami, PhD; Jeffrey Alexis, MD; Leway Chen, MD, MPH; Eugene Storozynsky, MD, PhD; Michael W. Fong, MD Uric Acid, Heart Failure Survival, and the Impact of Xanthine Oxidase Inhibition Arash Harzand, MD; Leonardo Tamariz, MD, MPH; Joshua M. Hare, MD Hyperuricemia and the Echocardiographic Measures of Myocardial Dysfunction Eswar Krishnan, MD, MPhil; Ali Hariri, MD; Omar Dabbous, MD, MPH; Bhavik J. Pandya, PharmD Serum Carbohydrate Antigen 125 Levels in Nonischemic Dilated Cardiomyopathy: A Useful Biomarker for Prognosis and Functional Mitral Regurgitation Oguz Karaca, MD; Gamze B. Guler, MD; Ekrem Guler, MD; H. Murat Gunes, MD; Elnur Alizade, MD; Hicaz Z. Agus, MD; Gokhan Gol, MD; Gokhan Kahveci, MD; Ozlem Esen, MD; A. Metin Esen, MD; Muhsin Turkmen, MD Additional Contents Within A JOURNAL OF: MODALITIES CONCEPTS MANAGEMENT MAY.JUNE2012VOL18ISSUE3 CONGESTIVE Heart Failure ® VOLUME 7 NUMBER 3 Pages 203–298 May–June 2012 In This Issue ASD and Chronic Lung Disease Fontan and Intra-atrial Tachycardia RV Function in Pulmonary Hypertension VOLUME 7 NUMBER 3 May–June 2012 wileyonlinelibrary.com/journal/chd Discover this journal online at CARDIOLOGY A PORTFOLIO OF PUBLICATIONS IN CARDIOVASCULAR MEDICINE AND THE CARDIOVASCULAR SUBSPECIALTIES www.wileyonlinelibrary.com/subject/cardiology

CARDIOLOGYonlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/(ISSN)1751... · 2013 Media Kit June 2012 Clinical Cardiology Volume 35 • Number 6 • Pages 321–382 Cover: An example of T2-weighted

  • Upload
    others

  • View
    0

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: CARDIOLOGYonlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/(ISSN)1751... · 2013 Media Kit June 2012 Clinical Cardiology Volume 35 • Number 6 • Pages 321–382 Cover: An example of T2-weighted

2013 Media Kit

June 2

01

2

Clin

ical Card

iology V

olum

e 35

• Num

ber 6

• Pages 3

21

–3

82

Cover: An example of T2-weighted (fast spin echo triple inversion recovery sequence) image of a 51-year-old male with reduced function (left ventricular ejection fraction 34%) and enhanced signal intensity of the myocardium of the left ventricle. This provides evidence of myocardial edema. The arrows signify elevated signal intensity of the myocardium. From “Evidence of Myocardial Edema in Patients With Nonischemic Dilated Cardiomyopathy” by M. Jeserich, D. Föll, M. Olschewski, S. Kimmel, M.G. Friedrich, C. Bode, A. Geibel, in this issue on page 374.

ReviewsElectromagnetic Interference and Implanted Cardiac Devices: The Medical Environment (Part II)

Cannabinoids and Atherosclerotic Coronary Heart Disease

Clinical Investigations

Clinical Characteristics, Sex Hormones, and Long-Term Follow-Up in Swiss Postmenopausal Women Presenting With Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy

Erroneous Computer Electrocardiogram Interpretation of Atrial Fibrillation and Its Clinical Consequences

Cocaine-Using Patients With a Normal or Nondiagnostic Electrocardiogram: Single-Photon Emission Computed Tomography Myocardial Perfusion Imaging and Outcome

Effect of Telmisartan on Paroxysmal Atrial Fibrillation Recurrence in Hypertensive Patients With Normal or Increased Left Atrial Size

JUNE2012VOL35

CLINICALCARDIOLOGYOfficial Journal of The American Society for Preventive Cardiology

www.clinical-cardiology.com

Baxter Healthcare Corporation | 95 Spring Street | New Providence, NJ 07974 1-800-ANA-DRUG (1-800-262-3784) | 01/12 748988D | www.baxter.com

BREVIBLOC (esmolol HCl) IndicationsSupraventricular tachycardia

» BREVIBLOC (esmolol HCl) is indicated for the rapid control of ventricular rate in patients with atrial fi brillation or atrial fl utter in perioperative, postoperative, or other emergent circumstances where short term control of ventricular rate with a short-acting agent is desirable

» BREVIBLOC (esmolol HCl) is also indicated in noncompensatory sinus tachycardia where, in the physician’s judgment, the rapid heart rate requires specifi c intervention

Intraoperative and postoperative tachycardia and/or hypertension

» BREVIBLOC (esmolol HCl) is indicated for the treatment of tachycardia and hypertension that occur during induction and tracheal intubation, during surgery, on emergence from anesthesia, and in the postoperative period, when in the physician’s judgment such specifi c intervention is considered indicated

Baxter, Brevibloc, Brevibloc Premixed, and the Double Heart design are trademarks of Baxter International Inc.

Heart rate control at your fi ngertips

» 2-minute distribution half-life and rapid onset of action—for swift stabilization of heart rate

» 9-minute elimination half-life—for quick decrease of effect during critical events

» 10- to 20-minute duration of action—for rapid reversibility of effect after terminating infusion

It’s the fast-on, fast-off profi le neededin critical care

BREVIBLOC PREMIXED Injection lets you swiftly adjust up, down, or off1

BREVIBLOC (esmolol HCl) Important Risk Information» BREVIBLOC (esmolol HCl) is contraindicated in patients

with sinus bradycardia, heart block greater than fi rst degree, cardiogenic shock, or overt heart failure

» Use with caution and monitor carefully during infusion for patients with left ventricular dysfunction, congestive heart failure, hypotension, reactive airway disease, and diabetes

» In general, patients with bronchospastic disease should not receive beta blockers

» Due to the relative beta1 selectivity and titratability, BREVIBLOC (esmolol HCl) may be used with caution in patients with bronchospastic disease

» Titrate to the lowest possible dose» Should not be used for treatment of hypertension due primarily

to vasoconstriction associated with hypothermia or to prevent tachycardia and/or hypertension

» Most common side effect was hypotension asymptomatic (25%) and symptomatic (12%), consisting mainly of dizziness and diaphoresis. Hypotension usually reverses within 30 minutes of dose decrease or infusion termination. Infusion site reactions also occurred (8%)

» Cardiac Failure: Despite the rapid onset and offset of the effects of BREVIBLOC (esmolol HCl), several cases of death have been reported in complex clinical states where BREVIBLOC (esmolol HCl) was presumably being used to control ventricular rate

Please see brief summary of Prescribing Information on the previous page.

Reference: 1. BREVIBLOC PREMIXED Injection [package insert]. New Providence, NJ: Baxter Healthcare Corporation; Revised 2007.

PRSRT STDU.S. POSTAGE

PAID

Lancaster, PAPermit 161

Journal Customer Services John Wiley & Sons, Inc.Commerce Place 350 Main Street Malden, MA 02148

CHANGE SERVICE REQUESTED

clc_35-6Cover.indd 1 29/05/12 9:20 PM

Thoracic Impedance Monitoring

Lumax family with TI monitoring.

Daily updates. Only with BIOTRONIK Home Monitoring®.

Tomorrow‘s must havetechnology ... TodayMore informative to manage heart failure progression

www.biotronik.com

Thor

acic ImpedancThor

e Monitacic Impedanc

oringe Monit

Volume 23 • Number 7 • July 2012

ISSN:1045-3873

Journ

al of C

ardio

vascular E

lectrop

hysio

log

yVo

l. 23, N

o. 7

, 687–8

00, Ju

ly 2012

Impact on mortality of etiology of ICD shocksThe cover illustration appears on page 738

Versio

n A

jce_23_7_cover1_jce 09/07/12 10:25 AM Page 1

� Two journal subscriptions:The Journal of Clinical Hypertension(JCH) and the Journal of the AmericanSociety of Hypertension (JASH)

Call it a “domino effect” or a “chain reaction,” but when itcomes to hypertension, it can no longer be consideredas a single-entity disease.

While hypertension is the most prevalent cause of strokeand kidney failure, hypertension must be recognized aspart of a bigger disease conglomerate almost alwaysaccompanied by obesity, diabetes, kidney disease or manyother co-morbidities involving lifestyle and/or genetics.

Better serve the needs of your hypertensive patientsJoin the American Society of Hypertension, Inc.(ASH) to stayat the forefront of leading-edge research and educationthat translates current findings on hypertension into effectivetreatment strategies.

The American Society of Hypertension remains committedto clinical investigation in hypertension and related vascularconditions, but has launched a renewed and vigorous focuson translational research. ASH membership integrates notonly investigators and physicians, but all hypertensionhealth care providers, including primary care physicians,physician assistants, nurse practitioners and PharmDs — aswell as patients themselves — to collectively treat and preventhypertension and its consequences.

� Access to slides & audio fromthe annual “Hypertension Highlights”sessions, access to the upcoming “ASHMembers online forum”, and much more

� Reduced registration fee forthe ASH Annual Scientific Meeting andother Society-sponsored ContinuingMedical Education (CME) events

Become a member today!

APPLY NOW ONLINE ATwww.ash-us.org

Being a member has its benefits:

John Wiley & Sons Inc.350 Main Street

Malden, MA 02148-5020

CHANGE SERVICE REQUESTED

Included in ISI and Index Medicus/MEDLINE

wileyonlinelibrary.com/journal/jch

Comparative Effectiveness of Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme Inhibitors and Angiotensin Receptor Blockers for Hypertension onClinical End Points: A Cohort StudyJason Roy, Nirav R. Shah, G. Craig Wood, Raymond Townsend, Sean Hennessy

Does Response of RAS Blockade on Serum K+ Levels Influence ItsGlycemic-Mitigating Response When Combined With Hydrochlorothiazide?Prakash C. Deedwania, Dion H. Zappe, Brent M. Egan, Das Purkayastha, Rita Samuel, James R. Sowers

Aggressive Blood Pressure–Lowering Therapy Guided by HomeBlood Pressure Monitoring Improves Target Organ Damage in Hypertensive Patients With Type 2 Diabetes/PrediabetesKazuo Eguchi, Satoshi Hoshide, Shizukiyo Ishikawa, Kazuyuki Shimada, Kazuomi Kario

Dietary Supplements and Hypertension: Potential Benefits and PrecautionsCarly B. Rasmussen, James K. Glisson, Deborah S. Minor

Validation of a French Version of the 8-Item Morisky Medication Adherence Scale in Hypertensive AdultsVirginie Korb-Savoldelli, Florence Gillaizeau, Jacques Pouchot, Emilie Lenain,Nicolas Postel-Vinay, Pierre-François Plouin, Pierre Durieux, Brigitte Sabatier

Can Access Limits on Sales Representatives to Physicians AffectClinical Prescription Decisions? A Study of Recent Events With Diabetes and Lipid DrugsGeorge A. Chressanthis, Pratap Khedkar, Nitin Jain, Prashant Poddar, Michael G. Seiders

A JOURNAL OF:

HYPERTENSION

DIABETES

LIPIDS

OBESITY

Volume 14 Issue 7 July 2012

OFFICIAL JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF HYPERTENSION, INC

JU

LY2012

TH

EJ

OU

RN

AL

OF

CL

INIC

AL

HY

PE

RT

EN

SIO

NV

OL

UM

E14

•IS

SU

E7

Additional Contents Within

jch_14_7_oc_Layout 6 6/15/2012 2:34 PM Page 1

THE OFFICIAL JOURNAL OF THE WORLD SOCIETY OF ARRHYTHMIA

PA

CE

Volume 35, N

o. 6, Pages 639–772June 2012

• JUNE 2012 • VOLUME 35 • NUMBER 6 •

639 Active Fixation Coronary Sinus Leadsby Kalahasty and Ellenbogen

641 Multicenter Experience with TLE of Active Fixation CS Leads byMaytin, et al.

648 Editorial by Kay and Ellenbogen650 Lessons from ICD Lead Recalls by Hauser652 Sprint Fidelis and Riata Defibrillator Leads by Van Rees, et al.659 Predisposing Factors for Fidelis Fractures by Bernstein, et al.665 Recalled Lead Revision Complications by Brumberg, et al.672 Questionnaire on ICD Therapy by Sadarmin, et al.681 ICDs and Bioimpedance Testing by Buch, et al.685 PMO in CRT Nonresponders by Gage et al.695 Persistent AF, AV Block, and DDD Pacing by Petrac, et al.703 Dialysis MTWA by Green, et al.711 Radiofrequency vs Cryoablation Efficacy by Buddhe, et al.718 Simulation of Clinical Electrophysiological Study by Zhu, et al.730 Electrogram Attenuation during Robotic Ablation by Duncan, et al.739 Hemodynamic Evaluation in Vasovagal Syncope by Nigro, et al.749 PVC Algorithm Inducing Ventricular Fibrillation by El-Damaty, et al.752 Ventricular Pacing at Maximal Sensor Rate by Koneru, et al.754 The Road Ends in Detroit by Olshansky757 Diagnostic SVT Pacing Maneuvers 2 by Veenhuyzen, et al.

e149 Coronary Sinus Lead Fragmentation and Migration by Arias, et al.e150 Monitoring ICD Lead Insulation Failure by Gelder and Gundersone154 Riata Lead Failure by Leong and Van Ervene156 Early Abrasions of Silicone Endocardial Leads by Zabek, et al.e159 An Unusual Case of Electromagnetic Interference by Anderson, et al.e163 Radiofrequency EMI by Vanga, et al.e167 Complications of an ICD by Kwon, et al.e170 Alternate Current Inducing Ventricular Tachycardia by Lappegårde173 SQ-Array and Azygos Vein Lead by Yamada, et al.e177 Laptop Interference with ICD by Tiikkaja, et al.e179 Defibrillation Threshold Testing Implantable Defibrillators by Nageh770 Letters to the Editor

pace_35_6_cover 5/25/12 11:32 AM Page 1

John Wiley & Sons Inc.350 Main Street

Malden, MA 02148-5020

CHANGE SERVICE REQUESTED

wileyonlinelibrary.com/journal/chf

IN THIS ISSUE:Body Mass Index and 25 Hydroxyvitamin D Status in Patients With andWithout Heart FailureChristina DiCarlo, BA; Brian Schmotzer, MS; Marianne Vest, MS, RN; Rebecca Boxer, MD

Review of Ambulatory Pulmonary Artery Catheterization in the Management of Advanced Heart FailureSharayne Mark, MD; Pedro Calderon-Artero, MD; Lisa Kakinami, PhD; Jeffrey Alexis, MD; Leway Chen, MD, MPH; Eugene Storozynsky, MD, PhD; Michael W. Fong, MD

Uric Acid, Heart Failure Survival, and the Impact of Xanthine OxidaseInhibitionArash Harzand, MD; Leonardo Tamariz, MD, MPH; Joshua M. Hare, MD

Hyperuricemia and the Echocardiographic Measures of MyocardialDysfunctionEswar Krishnan, MD, MPhil; Ali Hariri, MD; Omar Dabbous, MD, MPH; Bhavik J. Pandya, PharmD

Serum Carbohydrate Antigen 125 Levels in Nonischemic Dilated Cardiomyopathy: A Useful Biomarker for Prognosis and Functional Mitral RegurgitationOguz Karaca, MD; Gamze B. Guler, MD; Ekrem Guler, MD; H. Murat Gunes, MD;Elnur Alizade, MD; Hicaz Z. Agus, MD; Gokhan Gol, MD; Gokhan Kahveci, MD;Ozlem Esen, MD; A. Metin Esen, MD; Muhsin Turkmen, MD

Additional Contents Within

A JOURNAL OF:

MODALITIES

CONCEPTS

MANAGEMENT

MAY.JUNE2012VOL18ISSUE3

CONGESTIVE

Heart Failure®

Co

ng

estive

He

art Fa

ilure

May.Ju

ne

20

12

Vo

lum

e 1

8 . Issu

e 3

chf_18_3_oc_Layout 6 5/4/2012 8:18 PM Page 1

wileyhealthcarejobs.com

We make your research easy.NoW We make job huNtiNg easy.

Register and upload your resume/CV now to begin your job search!

Part of

• FIND premium jobs from the most respected names in healthcare

• ATTRACT hundreds of healthcare-industry recruiters and employers

• CREATE job alerts that match your criteria

• OBTAIN expert career advice and candidate resources

Drawing on our expertise and relationships in the healthcare industry, Wiley-blackwell invites you to join Wiley healthcare jobs, the definitive job site for healthcare professionals.

Let your partners in research energize your career.

VO

LUM

E 7

NU

MB

ER

3 P

ages 203–298

Ma

y–

Jun

e 2

01

2

In This Issue

ASD and Chronic Lung Disease

Fontan and Intra-atrial Tachycardia

RV Function in Pulmonary Hypertension

VOLUME 7

NUMBER 3

May–June 2012

wileyonlinelibrary.com/journal/chd

Discover this journal online at

PUSH BOUNDARIES

WILEY ONLINE LIBRARYAccess this journal and thousands of other essential resources. Featuring a clean and easy-to-use interface, this online service delivers intuitive navigation, enhanced discoverability, expanded functionalities, and a range of personalization and alerting options.

Sign up for content alerts and RSS feeds, access full-text, learn more about the journal, find related content, export citations, and click through to references.

wileyonlinelibrary.com

001_chd_v7_i3_OC_3.97mm.indd 1 5/24/2012 2:24:06 PM

CARDIOLOGYA PORTFOLIO OF PUBLICATIONS IN CARDIOVASCULAR MEDICINE AND THE

CARDIOVASCULAR SUBSPECIALTIES

www.wileyonlinelibrary.com/subject/cardiology

Page 2: CARDIOLOGYonlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/(ISSN)1751... · 2013 Media Kit June 2012 Clinical Cardiology Volume 35 • Number 6 • Pages 321–382 Cover: An example of T2-weighted

324

Jennifer JohnsonSenior Advertising Sales Representative

P 781.388.8512

E [email protected]

Alison McGonagle-O’ConnellReprint Sales Representative

P 781.388.8341

E [email protected]

Brooke MaynardAssociate Business Development Manager

P 781.388.8487

E [email protected]

2013 Media Kit

www.wileyonlinelibrary.com/subject/cardiology

Solutions

Wiley Cardiology PortfolioThe Wiley cardiology portfolio consists of 14 journals: 12 specialty-specific journals available in print and online–three of which are freely available to all users, one Open Access journal published on behalf of the American Heart Association, and one online-only elec-trophysiology journal. 86% of our journals are indexed by ISI and 93% are indexed by MEDLINE.

Through this extensive portfolio, you can reach more than 40,000 subscribers, over 45,000 cardiology professionals around the world who have opt-ed in to our mailing lists, and an online community of active users who download journal content and contribute to over 500,000 combined online impressions per month.

From efficient and knowlegeable service and competitive pricing to dedicated and flexible project management, you’ll receive the stra-tegic and tactical support you need to execute your campaigns.

About Wiley Wiley, the scientific, technical, medical, and scholarly business of John Wiley & Sons, Inc., publishes over 1,400 journals as well as over 1,500 new books annually in print and online. Wiley partners with over 700 societies representing over 1,000,000 members globally, including the American Cancer Society and the Cochrane Collaboration.

Page 3: CARDIOLOGYonlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/(ISSN)1751... · 2013 Media Kit June 2012 Clinical Cardiology Volume 35 • Number 6 • Pages 321–382 Cover: An example of T2-weighted

334

Jennifer JohnsonSenior Advertising Sales Representative

P 781.388.8512

E [email protected]

Alison McGonagle-O’ConnellReprint Sales Representative

P 781.388.8341

E [email protected]

Brooke MaynardAssociate Business Development Manager

P 781.388.8487

E [email protected]

2013 Media Kit

www.wileyonlinelibrary.com/subject/cardiology

Portfolio Readership

Readership Highlights• In addition to the 22,933 cardiologists and interventional cardiologists

who receive Clinical Cardiology in print, it is also received by 9,058 internal medicine physicians who are high prescribers of pharmaceuti-cals to treat heart disease.

• More than 32,000 family and internal medicine physicians who receive The Journal of Clinical Hypertension are based in solo practice or private group practices.

• Catheterization and Cardiovascular Interventions, the official journal of the Society for Cardiovascular Angiography and Interventions, averages 40.1 prescriptions written per ad exposure.

• Congestive Heart Failure reaches physicians who most frequently prescribe ace inhibitors, beta-blockers, digitalis preparations, diuretics, and antihypertensives in the US, as well as interventional cardiologists specializing in all therapeutic devices for the heart failure patient.

Who Our Readers AreWiley’s cardiology portfolio boasts a wide range of prestigious, indexed, and highly-cited journals that serve multiple specialties including Cardiac Surgery.

• Cardiovascular Drug Therapy

• Electrophysiology

• General Cardiology

• Hypertension and the Metabolic Syndrome

• Heart Disease, including Heart Failure

• Imaging

• Interventional Cardiology

• Internal and Family Medicine

Pediatric Cardiology

Imaging

Cardiac Surgery

Endocrinology, Diabetes, Metabolism

Interventional Cardiology

Electrophysiology

Family Medicine

Internal Medicine

CardiovascularDiseases

37%

2013

0 5000 10000 15000 20000

Endocrinology, Diabetes &Metabolism

Family Medicine Residents

Electrophysiology

Interventional Cardiology

Family Medicine

Cardiology

Internal Medicine

2013

Internal Medicine

31%

Page 4: CARDIOLOGYonlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/(ISSN)1751... · 2013 Media Kit June 2012 Clinical Cardiology Volume 35 • Number 6 • Pages 321–382 Cover: An example of T2-weighted

344

Jennifer JohnsonSenior Advertising Sales Representative

P 781.388.8512

E [email protected]

Alison McGonagle-O’ConnellReprint Sales Representative

P 781.388.8341

E [email protected]

Brooke MaynardAssociate Business Development Manager

P 781.388.8487

E [email protected]

2013 Media Kit

www.wileyonlinelibrary.com/subject/cardiology

In Print

Clinical Cardiology (CLC)Clinical Cardiology provides a forum for the coordination and translation of clinical cardiovascular research into practice. With its circulation of 31,902 cardiologists and internal medicine

physicians in the US, the journal has one of the highest reaches in cardiology today. CLC is the offical publication of the American Society for Preventive Cardiology.

The Journal of Clinical Hypertension (JCH)

A peer-reviewed, ISI- and MEDLINE-indexed publication that serves family practitioners, internists, endocrinolo-gists, and cardiologists, JCH provides objective, up-to-date information

and practical recommendations on the treatment of hypertension. Now including articles on all aspects of the metabolic syndrome, JCH offers its primary care audience content for the hyperten-sion specialist and the conditions contributing to the cardiometabolic syndrome, including obesity, diabetes, and dyslipidemia.

Congenital Heart Disease (CHD)Congenital Heart Disease is the only MEDLINE-indexed, peer-reviewed journal that brings the latest science and clinical approaches for treating infants, children, and adults with con-genital heart disease.

Journal of Cardiovascular Electrophysiology (JCE)

JCE features state-of–the-art science coupled with practical applications, to treat complex arrhythmias, as well as unique feature sections that include molecular perspectives, techniques

and technology and clinical reviews.

Catheterization and Cardiovascular Interventions (CCI)

Catheterization and Cardiovascular Interventions focuses on material of immediate practical value to interventional cardiologists. CCI is the official journal of the Society for Cardiovascular Angiography and Interventions (SCAI).

Pacing and Clinical Electrophysiology (PACE)

Since 1978, PACE, the first in the field of electrophysiology, has been deliver-ing the latest in heart pacing tech-nology to its readers, which include members of the Heart Rhythm Society.

PACE is the premiere journal in the treatment and management of heart rhythm abnormalities.

Congestive Heart Failure (CHF)Focused on the prevention and man-agement of congestive heart failure, the journal aims to educate cardiolo-gists and primary care providers on the diagnosis and treatment of CHF and

helps to establish “standards of care” that can be measured and correlated with clinical outcomes.

Journal of Cardiac Surgery (JCS)The Journal of Cardiac Surgery is the only journal devoted to contemporary surgical treatment of cardiac disease. Each issue offers readers the latest research, “how-to” methods, well-

illustrated articles, critical reviews, and important commentaries on all aspects of cardiac surgery.

THE OFFICIAL JOURNAL OF THE WORLD SOCIETY OF ARRHYTHMIA

PAC

EVolum

e 35, No. 6, Pages 639–772

June 2012

• JUNE 2012 • VOLUME 35 • NUMBER 6 •

639 Active Fixation Coronary Sinus Leadsby Kalahasty and Ellenbogen

641 Multicenter Experience with TLE of Active Fixation CS Leads byMaytin, et al.

648 Editorial by Kay and Ellenbogen650 Lessons from ICD Lead Recalls by Hauser652 Sprint Fidelis and Riata Defibrillator Leads by Van Rees, et al.659 Predisposing Factors for Fidelis Fractures by Bernstein, et al.665 Recalled Lead Revision Complications by Brumberg, et al.672 Questionnaire on ICD Therapy by Sadarmin, et al.681 ICDs and Bioimpedance Testing by Buch, et al.685 PMO in CRT Nonresponders by Gage et al.695 Persistent AF, AV Block, and DDD Pacing by Petrac, et al.703 Dialysis MTWA by Green, et al.711 Radiofrequency vs Cryoablation Efficacy by Buddhe, et al.718 Simulation of Clinical Electrophysiological Study by Zhu, et al.730 Electrogram Attenuation during Robotic Ablation by Duncan, et al.739 Hemodynamic Evaluation in Vasovagal Syncope by Nigro, et al.749 PVC Algorithm Inducing Ventricular Fibrillation by El-Damaty, et al.752 Ventricular Pacing at Maximal Sensor Rate by Koneru, et al.754 The Road Ends in Detroit by Olshansky757 Diagnostic SVT Pacing Maneuvers 2 by Veenhuyzen, et al.

e149 Coronary Sinus Lead Fragmentation and Migration by Arias, et al.e150 Monitoring ICD Lead Insulation Failure by Gelder and Gundersone154 Riata Lead Failure by Leong and Van Ervene156 Early Abrasions of Silicone Endocardial Leads by Zabek, et al.e159 An Unusual Case of Electromagnetic Interference by Anderson, et al.e163 Radiofrequency EMI by Vanga, et al.e167 Complications of an ICD by Kwon, et al.e170 Alternate Current Inducing Ventricular Tachycardia by Lappegårde173 SQ-Array and Azygos Vein Lead by Yamada, et al.e177 Laptop Interference with ICD by Tiikkaja, et al.e179 Defibrillation Threshold Testing Implantable Defibrillators by Nageh770 Letters to the Editor

pace_35_6_cover 5/25/12 11:32 AM Page 1

VO

LUM

E 7 NU

MB

ER 3 Pages 203–298

Ma

y–

Jun

e 2

012

In This Issue

ASD and Chronic Lung Disease

Fontan and Intra-atrial Tachycardia

RV Function in Pulmonary Hypertension

VOLUME 7

NUMBER 3

May–June 2012

wileyonlinelibrary.com/journal/chd

Discover this journal online at

PUSH BOUNDARIES

WILEY ONLINE LIBRARYAccess this journal and thousands of other essential resources. Featuring a clean and easy-to-use interface, this online service delivers intuitive navigation, enhanced discoverability, expanded functionalities, and a range of personalization and alerting options.

Sign up for content alerts and RSS feeds, access full-text, learn more about the journal, find related content, export citations, and click through to references.

wileyonlinelibrary.com

001_chd_v7_i3_OC_3.97mm.indd 1 5/24/2012 2:24:06 PM

Thoracic Impedance Monitoring

Lumax family with TI monitoring.

Daily updates. Only with BIOTRONIK Home Monitoring®.

Tomorrow‘s must havetechnology ... TodayMore informative to manage heart failure progression

www.biotronik.com

Thor

acic ImpedancThor

e Monitacic Impedanc

oringe Monit

Volume 23 • Number 7 • July 2012

ISSN:1045-3873

Journal of Card

iovascular Electrop

hysiologyVol. 23, N

o. 7, 687–800, July 2012

Impact on mortality of etiology of ICD shocksThe cover illustration appears on page 738

Version A

jce_23_7_cover1_jce 09/07/12 10:25 AM Page 1

John Wiley & Sons Inc.350 Main Street

Malden, MA 02148-5020

CHANGE SERVICE REQUESTED

wileyonlinelibrary.com/journal/chf

IN THIS ISSUE:Body Mass Index and 25 Hydroxyvitamin D Status in Patients With andWithout Heart FailureChristina DiCarlo, BA; Brian Schmotzer, MS; Marianne Vest, MS, RN; Rebecca Boxer, MD

Review of Ambulatory Pulmonary Artery Catheterization in the Management of Advanced Heart FailureSharayne Mark, MD; Pedro Calderon-Artero, MD; Lisa Kakinami, PhD; Jeffrey Alexis, MD; Leway Chen, MD, MPH; Eugene Storozynsky, MD, PhD; Michael W. Fong, MD

Uric Acid, Heart Failure Survival, and the Impact of Xanthine OxidaseInhibitionArash Harzand, MD; Leonardo Tamariz, MD, MPH; Joshua M. Hare, MD

Hyperuricemia and the Echocardiographic Measures of MyocardialDysfunctionEswar Krishnan, MD, MPhil; Ali Hariri, MD; Omar Dabbous, MD, MPH; Bhavik J. Pandya, PharmD

Serum Carbohydrate Antigen 125 Levels in Nonischemic Dilated Cardiomyopathy: A Useful Biomarker for Prognosis and Functional Mitral RegurgitationOguz Karaca, MD; Gamze B. Guler, MD; Ekrem Guler, MD; H. Murat Gunes, MD;Elnur Alizade, MD; Hicaz Z. Agus, MD; Gokhan Gol, MD; Gokhan Kahveci, MD;Ozlem Esen, MD; A. Metin Esen, MD; Muhsin Turkmen, MD

Additional Contents Within

A JOURNAL OF:

MODALITIES

CONCEPTS

MANAGEMENT

MAY.JUNE2012VOL18ISSUE3

CONGESTIVE

Heart Failure®

Co

ng

estive Heart Failu

reM

ay.Jun

e 2012V

olu

me 18 . Issu

e 3

chf_18_3_oc_Layout 6 5/4/2012 8:18 PM Page 1

wileyhealthcarejobs.com

We make your research easy.NoW We make job huNtiNg easy.

Register and upload your resume/CV now to begin your job search!

Part of

• FIND premium jobs from the most respected names in healthcare

• ATTRACT hundreds of healthcare-industry recruiters and employers

• CREATE job alerts that match your criteria

• OBTAIN expert career advice and candidate resources

Drawing on our expertise and relationships in the healthcare industry, Wiley-blackwell invites you to join Wiley healthcare jobs, the definitive job site for healthcare professionals.

Let your partners in research energize your career.

Page 5: CARDIOLOGYonlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/(ISSN)1751... · 2013 Media Kit June 2012 Clinical Cardiology Volume 35 • Number 6 • Pages 321–382 Cover: An example of T2-weighted

354

Jennifer JohnsonSenior Advertising Sales Representative

P 781.388.8512

E [email protected]

Alison McGonagle-O’ConnellReprint Sales Representative

P 781.388.8341

E [email protected]

Brooke MaynardAssociate Business Development Manager

P 781.388.8487

E [email protected]

2013 Media Kit

www.wileyonlinelibrary.com/subject/cardiology

In Print, continued.

Journal of Interventional Cardiology (JOIC)

Now indexed by ISI, the Journal of Interventional Cardiology is widely regarded as a must-read for the interventional cardiologist determined to stay current in diagnosing,

investigating, and managing patients with cardiovascular disease.

Cardiovascular Therapeutics (CT)Focusing on extensive reviews and original articles on the treatment of cardiovascular disease, the main focus of the journal is on cardiovascular pharmacology, clinical pharmacology,

and clinical trials of new or potential cardiovascu-lar therapies.

Echocardiography: A Journal of Cardiovascular Ultrasound and Allied Techniques (ECHO)

Echocardiography keeps its readership of echocardiographers, ultrasound specialists, and cardiologists well-informed of the latest developments in the field.

Artificial Organs (AOR)Since 1977, Artificial Organs has been publishing original articles featuring the studies of design, performance, and evaluation of the biomaterials and devices for the international

medical, scientific, and engineering communities involved in the research and clinical application of artificial organ development.

Annals on Noninvasive Electrocardiology

PREMIUM POSITIONS In addition to premium positions within the journals, Wiley offers a variety of Power Positions for product launches and conferences. Examples are listed below.

SALES OPPORTUNITIES:

Contact your sales representative for more information, pricing, and availability by journal.

• Wraps• Gatefolds

• Belly-bands• Cover-tips

• Outserts• Inserts

VISIBILITY

EXTREMEEXPOSURE

JUNE2012VOLUME 25NUMBER 3

ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROME

215 Early and Mid-Term Clinical Outcome of Emergency PCI in Patients with STEMI due to Unprotected Left Main Coronary Artery DiseaseAntonio Parma, M.D., et al.

223 A Comparison of Intracoronary with Intravenous Glycoprotein IIb/IIIaInhibitors During Percutaneous Coronary Intervention in Patients with AcuteCoronary Syndrome: A Meta-Analysis of Randomized Controlled TrialsGang Fu, M.D., et al.

235 Feasibility of Transradial Coronary Angiography and InterventionUsing a Single Ikari Left Guiding Catheter for ST Elevation MyocardialInfarctionJeremy Chow, M.B.B.S., M.R.C.P., M.Med. (Int. Med), et al.

245 Comparison of Three-Year Clinical Outcomes with Nonextended Versus Extended Dual Antiplatelet Therapy Between First- and Second-Generation Drug-Eluting Stent Implantation in Patients with Acute Myocardial Infarction: Data from the Infarct Prognosis Study RegistryKi-Woon Kang, M.D., et al.

253 One-Year Clinical Outcomes after Sirolimus-Eluting Coronary Stent Implantation for Acute Myocardial Infarction in the Worldwide e-SELECT RegistryStephen G. Worthley, M.D., et al.

262 Glycosylated Hemoglobin and Outcomes in Diabetic Patients with Acute Myocardial Infarction after Successful Revascularization with Stent Placement: Findings from the Guthrie Health Off- Label Stent (GHOST) InvestigatorsAnand Singla, M.D., et al.

CORONARY ARTERY DISEASE

270 Relationship between Stent Malapposition and IncompleteNeointimal Coverage after Drug-Eluting Stent ImplantationByeong-Keuk Kim, M.D., et al.

278 Comparative Effectiveness Analysis of Anticoagulant Strategies in a Large Observational Database of Percutaneous CoronaryInterventionsGregory R. Wise, M.D., et al.

289 A Modified Provisional Stenting Approach to Coronary BifurcationLesions: Clinical Application of the “Jailed-Balloon Technique” Jasvindar Singh, M.D., et al.

297 A Novel Approach to Facilitating Balloon Crossing Chronic TotalOcclusions: The “Wire-Cutting” TechniqueXin-Qun Hu, M.D., et al.

STRUCTURAL HEART DISEASE

304 Transcranial Doppler Quantification of Residual Shunt afterPercutaneous Patent Foramen Ovale Closure: Correlation of DeviceEfficacy with Intracardiac Anatomic MeasuresSherman G. Sorensen, M.D., et al.

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

313 Regarding Protamine, ACT and Sheath RemovalStuart Walker

315 Expanding the Use of 7-Fr Radial Access to Primary PercutaneousInterventionVeeran Subramaniam, M.R.C.P., et al.

COMMENTARY

317 Guthrie Health Off-Label Stent (GHOST) RegistryKishore J. Harjai, M.D., M.M.M., F.A.C.C., F.S.C.A.I., and Pam Orshaw, R.N.

BOOK REVIEW

319 Percutaneous Mitral Valvotomy by S. HarikrishnanTed Feldman, M.D., F.E.S.C., F.A.C.C., F.S.C.A.I.

321 CORRIGENDUM

Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

An International Forum for Global Cardiovascular Therapies

InterventionalCardiology

Journal OfInterventional

Cardiology

ISSN 0896-4327

Wiley P

eriodicals, Inc.

JUN

E2012

VO

LU

ME

25 NU

MB

ER

3Journ

al ofInterventional C

ardiology

wileyonlinelibrary.com/journal/joic

joic_25_3_cover 5/29/12 7:36 AM Page 1

Echocardiography Volum

e 29 Num

ber 6 Pag

es 631-75

6

July 2012

Volume 29Number 6July 2012

A Journal of Cardiovascular Ultrasound and Allied Techniques

EchocardiographyEditor in Chief: Dr. Navin C. Nanda

International Society of Cardiovascular Ultrasound

Page 729 • Monitoring Complex Secundum Atrial Septal Defects Percutaneous Closure with Real Time Three-Dimensional Echocardiography

wileyonlinelibrary.

com/jo

urnal/ech

o

CME Page 653 • Chronic Pulmonary Hypertension Causes Signifi cant

Interventricular Spatiotemporal Dyssynchrony When Onset of

Diastolic Flow Signals Are Assessed by Color M-Mode

echo_29_6_cover.indd 1 6/24/12 11:22:59 AM

AR

TIFIC

IAL

OR

GA

NS

VO

L. 36, N

O. 7, 2012 PA

GE

S 575–650

Official Peer Reviewed Journal of THE INTERNATIONAL FEDERATION FOR ARTIFICIAL ORGANSMembers of the Federation are: The American Society for Artificial Internal Organs,

The European Society for Artificial Organs, and The Japanese Society for Artificial Organs THE INTERNATIONAL FACULTY FOR ARTIFICIAL ORGANS

THE INTERNATIONAL SOCIETY FOR ROTARY BLOOD PUMPS

Replacement, Recovery, and Regeneration

www.artificialorgans.org

ESAO®

InternationalCenter for ArtificialOrgans andTransplantation

July 2012 Volume 36 · Number 7

wileyonlinelibrary.com/journal/aor

Discover this journal online at

Pioneer Series Editorial

My Addiction: The Artificial Kidney The Rise and Fall of Dialysis

Carl M. Kjellstrand

001_aor_v36_i7_OC & IC_2.78mm.in1 1 6/20/2012 4:16:31 PM

ONL

INE ONLY

Page 6: CARDIOLOGYonlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/(ISSN)1751... · 2013 Media Kit June 2012 Clinical Cardiology Volume 35 • Number 6 • Pages 321–382 Cover: An example of T2-weighted

364

Jennifer JohnsonSenior Advertising Sales Representative

P 781.388.8512

E [email protected]

Alison McGonagle-O’ConnellReprint Sales Representative

P 781.388.8341

E [email protected]

Brooke MaynardAssociate Business Development Manager

P 781.388.8487

E [email protected]

2013 Media Kit

www.wileyonlinelibrary.com/subject/cardiology

On the Web

Our online journals attract and keep visitors. Each month our journal sites get more than 650,000 impressions.

In addition to print options, you also have a range of online advertising opportunities. High traffic and page impressions guarantee access to our captive cardiology audience and allow you to deliver a targeted message with vast exposure.

Online journals are hosted on Wiley Online Library, one of the most-used platforms for scientific, technical, medical, and scholarly research. Each online edition features current and archived articles in searchable, html and pdf full-text formats, as well as the opportunity to sign up for email table-of-contents

alerts, citation reporting, and more.

MetricsAdvertising metrics are independently reported by DoubleClick, the industry leader in web ad management. Our DoubleClick re-ports provide valuable data about visitors who saw and clicked through advertisements. Metrics include geographic data (country, state, and region), activity by timelines, domain types, operating systems, and web browsers.

Other Sales OpportunitiesElectronic Reprints (ePrints) ePrints are easily accessible, secure, interactive reprints presented in electronic format for use on personal computers, laptops, and mo-bile devices. ePrints are purchased based on total views needed to satisfy the intended audience. Please contact your sales representa-tive for additional information and pricing.

Enhanced ArticlesAs more derivative content delivery formats are being developed to contextualize and accompany journal content (podcasts, webcasts, blogs, etc.), enhanced articles, or article-level microsites, are enabling ease of use among the end-user population by displaying all article enhancements in an aesthetically pleasing online environment. Sponsorship opportunities of article-level microsites are available. Please contact your sales representative for additional information and pricing.

SAVINGS

Purchase impressions across the cardiology portfolio to extend reach and maximize value.

SAVINGS

PACKAGEDBUNDLES

Annals on Noninvasive Electrocardiology

Page 7: CARDIOLOGYonlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/(ISSN)1751... · 2013 Media Kit June 2012 Clinical Cardiology Volume 35 • Number 6 • Pages 321–382 Cover: An example of T2-weighted

374

Jennifer JohnsonSenior Advertising Sales Representative

P 781.388.8512

E [email protected]

Alison McGonagle-O’ConnellReprint Sales Representative

P 781.388.8341

E [email protected]

Brooke MaynardAssociate Business Development Manager

P 781.388.8487

E [email protected]

2013 Media Kit

www.wileyonlinelibrary.com/subject/cardiology

Digitally Distributed

Digitally distributed products in the Cardiology portfolio can reach up to 42,051 opt-in cardiologists worldwide, or be segmented based on discipline or geographic location. Advertising opportunities are available in the following e-blasts:

Cardiology Newsletter:Distributed bi-monthly to our entire list of opt-in contacts, Wiley’s Cardiology NewsWire provides a necessary update on the latest cardiology research and regularly features:

• A thought-provoking “Point-of-View” in which cardiology journal editors offer their unique perspective on hot topics

• Free access to leading research articles and evidence-based medicine content

• Links to upcoming conferences

• Exclusive discounts on new and best-selling books

Additional Opportunities:Custom eNewslettersCustom eNewsletters deliver topical educational and scholarly content blasted directly to physicians and feature your brand or product messages. Delivered in client-branded html, these digitally distributed products contain abstracts with links to full text journal articles (typically 3-5 articles), selected from stores of content typically only available to subscribers.

eTOCsElectronic Tables of Contents (eTOCs) are blasted out to opt-in readers of the journals each time an issue publishes. Contact your sales representative to receive information about pricing and circulation.

Positions AvailableBanner and leaderboard positions are available. Contact your sales representative for pricing and availability.

Open/Click PerformanceOpen and click-through reports are available to advertisers for each digitally distributed product. Generally, our open rates for the Cardiology Newsletter average 17%. The average Click-To-Open Rate (CTOR) is 22%.

Target your message to physicians and healthcare professionals based on their geographic region or subscription profile.

SAVINGS

EffECTIVETARGETING

Page 8: CARDIOLOGYonlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/(ISSN)1751... · 2013 Media Kit June 2012 Clinical Cardiology Volume 35 • Number 6 • Pages 321–382 Cover: An example of T2-weighted

384

Jennifer JohnsonSenior Advertising Sales Representative

P 781.388.8512

E [email protected]

Alison McGonagle-O’ConnellReprint Sales Representative

P 781.388.8341

E [email protected]

Brooke MaynardAssociate Business Development Manager

P 781.388.8487

E [email protected]

2013 Media Kit

www.wileyonlinelibrary.com/subject/cardiology

Sponsorship Opportunities

To meet your publication requirements,

our Global Business Development Team

will work with you to deliver content

that is of value to clinicians through an

educational package, either in print

or online.

Our cardiology journals are published

by Wiley in accordance with

its Publication Ethics guidelines.

WebinarsWebinars provide web-based presentations, lectures, workshops or seminars, allowing the end user to interact with subject-matter experts in real-time. Events are archived for 12 months following their launch.

Podcast and Audio DownloadsPodcasts are a series of downloadable audio and/or video files that are distributed through our systems (including web sites and email alerts) and via RSS feeds (commonly through iTunes). Also available are audio downloads, which generally consist of a single audio and/or video file. Alerts to listen and how to listen are managed through our systems.

Enhanced ArticlesAn Enhanced Article is a dedicated, article-specific micro site created for any article, or group of arti-cles published by Wiley. Enhanced Articles extend the reach of a clinical study to regular readers as well as difficult-to-reach clinical audiences.

Patient Tear PadsTargeted to patients, tear pads feature informa-tion on features, benefits, and risks on specific topics. A tear pad is also a convenient visual aid for physicians to deliver patient information.

SupplementsThe publication of articles on a single topic or theme, supplements could be based on proceed-ings from roundtable discussions, symposia, or a collection of review articles. All supplements must be approved in concept by the Editors prior to submission. All supplements are subject to peer-review and are not guaranteed acceptance. No single drug supplements will be considered.

Expert Panel Discussions An open forum for a panel of experts to discuss issues on a selected topic, which typically cov-ers diagnosis, evaluation and management of a disease. This is a one-hour teleconference that is recorded, transcribed, and published within the journal.

Wall ChartsOne-page posters that can be affixed to walls, these products are visually driven and generally feature topical content.