David Bram Pryor M.D.
Cardiologist | Cardiovascular Disease
4600 Edmundson Rd Saint Louis MO, 63134About
Dr. David Pryor is a cardiologist practicing in Saint Louis, MO. Dr. Pryor specializes in diagnosing, monitoring, and treating diseases or conditions of the heart and blood vessels and the cardiovascular system. These conditions include heart attacks, heart murmurs, coronary heart disease, and hypertension. Dr. Pryor also practices preventative medicine, helping patients maintain a heart-healthy life.
Education and Training
University of Mi Med Sch 1976
University of Michigan Medical School 2004
Provider Details
Expert Publications
Data provided by the National Library of Medicine- Bridging the technical-clinical gap. Interview by John Morrissey.
- Ergonovine maleate testing during cardiac catheterization: a 10-year perspective in 3,447 patients without significant coronary artery disease or Prinzmetal's variant angina.
- Mortality after coronary angioplasty and coronary artery bypass surgery (the national Medicare experience).
- Genomics and the ministry: the executive perspective. Four leaders of Catholic health care organizations offer their opinions.
- Changing efficacies of coronary revascularization.
- Prognostic value of a treadmill exercise score in outpatients with suspected coronary artery disease.
- Exercise radionuclide angiocardiography predicts cardiac death in patients with coronary artery disease.
- Determinants of early versus late cardiac death in patients undergoing coronary artery bypass graft surgery.
- Using ordinal logistic regression to estimate the likelihood of colorectal neoplasia.
- Prediction of death and myocardial infarction by radionuclide angiocardiography in patients with suspected coronary artery disease.
- Predicting the outcomes of electrophysiologic studies of patients with unexplained syncope: preliminary validation of a derived model.
- Methods for the analysis and assessment of clinical databases: the clinician's perspective.
- Clinical judgment and therapeutic decision making.
- The academic life cycle of a noninvasive test.
- Effect of Type A behavior on exercise test outcome in coronary artery disease.
David Bram Pryor M.D.'s Practice location
David Bram Pryor M.D.'s reviews
Write ReviewRecommended Articles
- What Are HIIT Workouts?
What is a HIIT Workout?HIIT workout plans are intensive and punishing, but there are good reasons why they are very popular. HIIT stands for high-intensity interval training. As its name implies, it is an explosive and high-power workout. It is not a specific workout or exercise routine. Rather,...
- What Is a CPK Lab Test?
What is creatine phosphokinase (CPK)?Creatine phosphokinase (CPK) is an enzyme, which is predominantly present in the heart, brain, and skeletal muscles. Converting creatine into phosphate is the main task of this enzyme. The cells of the body then quickly consume or burn this phosphate and use it...
- Can Low Blood Pressure be Serious?
Blood pressure lower than 90/60 mm of Hg is referred to as low blood pressure, or hypotension. The first number is the measure of pressure in the arteries when the heart beats and fills blood in them. The second number is the pressure in the arteries when the heart is at rest between two beats. In...
- Diagnosing Heart Palpitations
What are heart palpitations?Heart palpitations are when you start feeling your own heart beating. You will feel as if your heart is beating too fast, slow, forcefully, or irregularly. You will feel as if you missed a beat. The frequency and severity of heart palpitations will vary from one person to...
- Nuts and your heart: Eating nuts for heart health
Whether roasted or raw, walnuts are the best nuts and have an abundance of heart healthy nutrients. In a recent study, researchers compared the amount of polyphenols — the powerful antioxidants — in nine types of roasted and raw nuts. They also measured the amount of these antioxidants in two...
- What are Phytosterols?
Experts are of the opinion that phytosterols improve the body’s ability to lower cholesterol levels. Like other cholesterol-lowering foods, including salmon and oats, phytosterols are supposed to lower the levels of ‘bad’ cholesterol, LDL. Phytosterols, or plant sterols and stanol esters, are...