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1. Exercise Training Reduces Inflammation and Fibrosis and Preserves Myocardial Function and Perfusion in a Model of Chronic Chagas Cardiomyopathy.

2. Predictors of Appropriate Therapies and Death in Patients with Implantable Cardioverter-Defibrillator and Chronic Chagas Heart Disease.

3. Chagas Cardiomyopathy and Myocardial Sympathetic Denervation.

4. Inspiratory muscle endurance is similarly reduced in the early and late stages of chronic Chagas heart disease.

5. Myocardial Fibrosis by Magnetic Resonance and Outcomes in Chagas Disease: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.

7. Impairment of Multiple Mitochondrial Energy Metabolism Pathways in the Heart of Chagas Disease Cardiomyopathy Patients.

8. Co-Exposure of Cardiomyocytes to IFN-γ and TNF-α Induces Mitochondrial Dysfunction and Nitro-Oxidative Stress: Implications for the Pathogenesis of Chronic Chagas Disease Cardiomyopathy.

9. Accuracy and reliability of focused echocardiography in patients with Chagas disease from endemic areas: SaMi-Trop cohort study.

10. Accuracy of health-related quality of life in identifying systolic dysfunction in patients with Chagas cardiomyopathy.

11. Exercise training improves microvascular function in patients with Chagas heart disease: Data from the PEACH study.

12. Cardiac magnetic resonance imaging in Chagas' disease: a parallel with electrophysiologic studies.

13. Associations between Cardiac Magnetic Resonance T1 Mapping Parameters and Ventricular Arrhythmia in Patients with Chagas Disease.

14. Effect of Physical Exercise Training in Patients With Chagas Heart Disease (from the PEACH STUDY).

15. Reactive oxygen species and nitric oxide imbalances lead to in vivo and in vitro arrhythmogenic phenotype in acute phase of experimental Chagas disease.

16. CCL3/Macrophage Inflammatory Protein-1α Is Dually Involved in Parasite Persistence and Induction of a TNF- and IFNγ-Enriched Inflammatory Milieu in Trypanosoma cruzi -Induced Chronic Cardiomyopathy.

17. Exercise tests in Chagas cardiomyopathy: an overview of functional evaluation, prognostic significance, and current challenges.

19. Ventricular arrhythmias in the Chagas disease are not random phenomena: Long-term monitoring in Chagas arrhythmias.

20. Chagas disease is associated with a worse prognosis at 1-year follow-up after implantable cardioverter-defibrillator for secondary prevention in heart failure patients.

21. Renal denervation in patients with heart failure secondary to Chagas' disease: A pilot randomized controlled trial.

22. Myocardial fibrosis in chagas disease and molecules related to fibrosis.

23. Comparison of the amount and patterns of late enhancement in Chagas disease according to the presence and type of ventricular tachycardia.

24. Speckle tracking echocardiographic deformation indices in Chagas and idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy: Incremental prognostic value of longitudinal strain.

25. Concomitant exercise training attenuates the cardioprotective effects of pharmacological therapy in a murine model of acute infectious myocarditis.

26. Analysis of Iron Metabolism in Chronic Chagasic Cardiomyopathy.

27. Effects of Trypanocidal Treatment on Echocardiographic Parameters in Chagas Cardiomyopathy and Prognostic Value of Wall Motion Score Index: A BENEFIT Trial Echocardiographic Substudy.

28. Dysregulation of insulin levels in Chagas heart disease is associated with altered adipocytokine levels.

29. High fat diet aggravates cardiomyopathy in murine chronic Chagas disease.

30. Echocardiographic Study of the Coronary Sinus in the Indeterminate Form of Chagas Disease.

31. A cohort study of cardiac resynchronization therapy in patients with chronic Chagas cardiomyopathy.

32. Association between typical electrocardiographic abnormalities and NT-proBNP elevation in a large cohort of patients with Chagas disease from endemic area.

33. A protocol update for the Selenium Treatment and Chagasic Cardiomyopathy (STCC) trial.

34. Regional Myocardial Perfusion Disturbance in Experimental Chronic Chagas Cardiomyopathy.

35. Obstructive Sleep Apnea is Common and Associated with Heart Remodeling in Patients with Chagas Disease.

36. Prognostic value of serum brain-derived neurotrophic factor levels in patients with Chagas cardiomyopathy.

37. Sympathetic Dysautonomia in Heart Failure by 123I-MIBG: comparison between Chagasic, non-Chagasic and heart transplant patients.

38. Cardiac autonomic modulation and long-term use of amiodarone in patients with chronic Chagasic cardiopathy.

39. Physiological and unappreciated roles of CaMKII in the heart.

40. Electrocardiographic abnormalities in Chagas disease in the general population: A systematic review and meta-analysis.

41. PARP1 depletion improves mitochondrial and heart function in Chagas disease: Effects on POLG dependent mtDNA maintenance.

42. Dysautonomy in different death risk groups (Rassi score) in patients with Chagas heart disease.

43. Value of the Electrocardiographic (P Wave, T Wave, QRS) Axis as a Predictor of Mortality in 14 Years in a Population With a High Prevalence of Chagas Disease from the Bambuí Cohort Study of Aging.

44. Trypanosoma cruzi activates mouse cardiac fibroblasts in vitro leading to fibroblast-myofibroblast transition and increase in expression of extracellular matrix proteins.

45. Dysregulated Network of Immune, Endocrine and Metabolic Markers is Associated to More Severe Human Chronic Chagas Cardiomyopathy.

46. Rapidly progressive course of Trypanosoma cruzi infection in mice heterozygous for hexamethylene bis-acetamide inducible 1 (Hexim1) gene.

47. Additional value of anaerobic threshold in a general mortality prediction model in a urban patient cohort with Chagas cardiomyopathy.

48. Early clinics of the cardiac forms of Chagas' disease: Discovery and study of original medical files (1909-1915).

49. Cardiac manifestations of parasitic diseases.

50. Expression and production of cardiac angiogenic mediators depend on the Trypanosoma cruzi-genetic population in experimental C57BL/6 mice infection.

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