George Billman

http://dbpedia.org/resource/George_Billman an entity of type: Thing

George Edward Billman (born July 23, 1954) is an American physiologist and professor at Ohio State University. After receiving a Ph.D from the University of Kentucky in 1980, Billman began his professional career at the University of Oklahoma. In 1984, he joined the Ohio State staff, where he became an associate professor in 1990 and a full professor in 1996. rdf:langString
rdf:langString George Billman
rdf:langString George Edward Billman
rdf:langString George Edward Billman
rdf:langString Fort Worth, Texas
xsd:date 1954-07-23
xsd:integer 44472134
xsd:integer 1115788641
rdf:langString The Neural Control of the Coronary Circulation during Behavioral Stress in Conscious Dogs
xsd:integer 1980
rdf:langString George Billman wearing a cowboy hat with empty beer cartons hung on the wall behind him
rdf:langString Fellow – American Heart Association
rdf:langString Fellow – Heart Rhythm Society
xsd:date 1954-07-23
rdf:langString Billman in his office in 2005
xsd:integer 2
rdf:langString American
rdf:langString Physiology
rdf:langString Studying the effects of exercise training and omega-3 fatty acids on the cardiovascular system
rdf:langString Rosemary
rdf:langString George Edward Billman (born July 23, 1954) is an American physiologist and professor at Ohio State University. After receiving a Ph.D from the University of Kentucky in 1980, Billman began his professional career at the University of Oklahoma. In 1984, he joined the Ohio State staff, where he became an associate professor in 1990 and a full professor in 1996. Billman's research has focused on cardiovascular function, in particular its role in the induction of ventricular fibrillation (VF). He developed non-invasive methods to study autonomic neural regulation of the heart, using a canine model of sudden cardiac death (SCD). These techniques have subsequently been used in human patients to identify people at high risk for VF. Billman has used his sudden cardiac death models to study the effects of exercise training on susceptibility to SCD and the effects of omega-3 fatty acids, among other things. Due to his use of live animals in experiments, Billman has been criticized by animal rights activists; however, a 2009 regulatory investigation found no evidence of wrongdoing.
rdf:langString David C. Randall
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 28083

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