Paul D. Thompson MD
Chief of Cardiology – Emeritus, Hartford Hospital, Hartford, Connecticut; Professor of Medicine –Emeritus, University of Connecticut, Storrs, ConnecticutDr. Paul Thompson is Chief of Cardiology – Emeritus, Hartford Hospital, Hartford, Connecticut, and Professor of Medicine – Emeritus at the University of Connecticut in Storrs. He previously was Professor of Medicine at the University of Pittsburgh from 1992 to 1997 and on the faculty of Brown University from 1978 to 1992.
He has authored over 500 scientific articles on topics which include: the treatment of cardiovascular risk factors; the effects of exercise training on preventing and treating heart disease; the risk of sudden death during exercise; the effects of statins on muscle function; and genetic factors affecting the exercise response. His past NIH funding includes the Preventive Cardiology Academic Award as well as studies examining the effect of exercise training on HDL metabolism; the effect of testosterone on endothelial function; genetic factors affecting muscle hypertrophy with exercise training; the effects of statins on skeletal muscle strength; the effects of coenzyme Q10 on statin myalgia; and genetic factors increasing the risk of statin myalgia.
Dr. Thompson is the co-editor of the book Exercise and Sports Cardiology and of the book Statin-Associated Muscle Symptoms. He is a past president of the American College of Sports Medicine.
Disclosures
- Consultant: Legal consultation on exercise-related cardiac events and statin myopathy
- Research funding: Esperion; Novartis
- Financial interests: Abbott Labs; CVS; Illumina; Novo-Nordisk; GE Healthcare; Johnson & Johnson; Medtronic; OpSens; scPharmaceuticals; Sarepta; Shockwave Medical
Recent Contributions to PracticeUpdate:
- Leisure-Time Running Reduces All-Cause and Cardiovascular Mortality Risk
- Life-Threatening Events During Endurance Sports: Heat Stroke vs Arrhythmic Death
- Prognostic Value of Fasting vs Non-Fasting LDL Levels on Long-Term Mortality
- Prediction of 30-Year Risk for CV Mortality by Fitness and Risk Factor Levels
- Healthy Lifestyle Change and Subclinical Atherosclerosis in Young Adults
- Frequently Asked Questions in Cardiology: Heart Health-Prevention
- Aerobic Fitness in Adolescence Improves Cardiac Risk Later On
- 2013 Top Stories in Cardiology: Cardiovascular Disease Prevention
- Changes in Ambulance Calls Following Implementation of a Smokefree Law and Its Extension to Casinos
- Cardiac Arrest at Exercise Facilities: Implications for Placement of Automated External Defibrillators