Cardiac macrophages promote diastolic dysfunction
Maarten Hulsmans(Harvard University), Matthias Nahrendorf(Massachusetts General Hospital), Michael T. Osborne(Harvard University), Claudio Vinegoni(Harvard University), Yoshiko Iwamoto(Harvard University), Filip K. Świrski(Allen Institute for Brain Science), Nicholas Houstis(Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research), Gregory R. Wojtkiewicz(Harvard University), Amy D. Bradshaw(Medical University of South Carolina), Michael R. Zile(Medical University of South Carolina), Anthony Rosenzweig(Stanley Medical Research Institute), Ronglih Liao(Amyloidosis Foundation), Ahmed Tawakol(Massachusetts General Hospital), Flora Sam(Boston University), Kamila Naxerova(Harvard University), Ralph Weissleder(Massachusetts General Hospital), María Valero‐Muñoz(Boston University), Benoit Tricot(Harvard University), Jason D. Roh(Massachusetts General Hospital), Judy Hung(Harvard University), Yuan Sun(Harvard University), David E. Sosnovik(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Richard Wilson(Boston University), Hendrik B. Sager(German Centre for Cardiovascular Research)
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