Provide difficult application of state - of - the - art structures with techniques as well as state - of - the - arm procedures that covered the complete range
of clinical cardiology.
Acquired an extended experience during the cardiology fellowship period of two years with the extensive knowledge
of clinical cardiology.
Upon completion of his residency Dr. Lesser took over as head
of the clinical cardiology service until 1991.
Not exact matches
CTI - 1601 was invented by R. Mark Payne, MD, professor
of Pediatric
Cardiology at Indiana University School
of Medicine and director
of the Translational Research Training Program
of Indiana
Clinical Translational Sciences Institute.
St - Onge M - P, Ard J, Baskin ML, Chiuve SE, Johnson HM, Kris - Etherton P, Varady on behalf
of American Heart Association Obesity Committee
of the Council on Lifestyle and Cardiometabolic Health; Council on Cardiovascular Disease in the Young; Council on
Clinical Cardiology; and Stroke Council.
He trained as a psychiatrist and is board certified by the American Board
of Psychiatry and Neurology He has published in the American Journal
of Clinical Nutrition, Lancet Oncology the American Journal
of Cardiology and is an invited peer reviewer for the National Institute
of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases
of the National Institutes
of Health.
Now, researchers at the University Department
of Internal Medicine II at the MedUni Vienna (
Clinical Department
of Cardiology), as part
of an international cooperation, have successfully demonstrated the advantages
of an implanted defibrillator (ICD) as a means
of prevention in patients with moderately restricted cardiac function, and that patients with the condition must be treated as carefully as patients with ischaemic heart failure which has developed following a heart attack, for example.
Wilber is director
of Loyola's Division
of Cardiology and Section
of Clinical Electrophysiology.
Results
of the randomized
clinical trial
of the dietary combination, conducted by researchers at the Johns Hopkins University School
of Medicine, were published in the Nov. 12 issue
of Journal
of the American College
of Cardiology.
«We aren't using older stents anymore, so this study gives us some insight into more up - to - date
clinical outcomes,» says Sripal Bangalore MD, an associate professor in NYU Langone's Leon H. Charney Division
of Cardiology, Department
of Medicine, who was lead author
of the study.
The American College
of Cardiology and the American Heart Association today released a new
clinical practice guideline for the treatment
of blood cholesterol in people at high risk for cardiovascular diseases caused by atherosclerosis, or hardening and narrowing
of the arteries, that can lead to heart attack, stroke or death.
The findings are published in JAMA
Cardiology by a team led by members
of the University
of Michigan Institute for Healthcare Policy and Innovation and the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and
Clinical Practice.
Now a study, published in JAMA
Cardiology and led by a member
of the Duke
Clinical Research Institute, provides some answers.
Michos notes that a recent randomized
clinical trial published in JAMA
Cardiology failed to show any cardiovascular benefit with high - doses
of monthly vitamin D supplements among participants living in New Zealand.
«The recent niacin
clinical trials offer important new evidence that raising «good» cholesterol (HDL) levels on top
of statin therapy does not have the positive outcome that had been hoped for,» said Neil Stone, M.D., the Robert Bonow MD Professor in
Cardiology at Feinberg and a cardiologist at Northwestern Memorial Hospital.
That theory was tested in a study
of heart attack survivors led by the Duke
Clinical Research Institute; findings were presented March 11 at the American College
of Cardiology annual scientific sessions meeting in Orlando.
Despite lowering low - density lipoprotein (LDL), known as «bad» cholesterol, while markedly increasing levels
of high - density lipoprotein (HDL), or «good» cholesterol, a large
clinical trial to investigate the cholesterol drug evacetrapib was discontinued early after a preliminary analysis showed it did not reduce rates
of major adverse cardiovascular events, according to research presented at the American College
of Cardiology's 65th Annual Scientific Session.
«Running, or any kind high - intensity exercise, puts a strain on the heart muscle, as it does on lung tissue, and leg and arm muscles,» said Neel Chokshi, MD, an assistant professor
of Clinical Cardiovascular Medicine, and medical director
of the Penn Sports
Cardiology and Fitness Program.
As a full - time employee at Merck Frosst Canada, I cut my teeth on Phase IIb and III
clinical trials in the areas
of cardiology, endocrinology, infectious disease, and rheumatology.
The findings were published today in The New England Journal
of Medicine and presented as Late - Breaking
Clinical Trial at the American College
of Cardiology's 67th Annual Scientific Session and Expo in Orlando.
«This program capitalizes on local resources that can bring about change in behavior and improve blood pressure rates,» said Monique Anderson, M.D., lead researcher
of the study and a medical instructor in
cardiology at the Duke
Clinical Research Institute and the Duke School
of Medicine in Durham, N.C. «As participants became more knowledgeable, they probably started exercising more, taking their medication more, and those who were really engaged showed dramatic responses in blood pressure change.»
Through the UCSD
Clinical Cardiovascular Cell Therapy program, Dib and collaborating cardiology faculty plan to conduct clinical studies in a number of areas, including the effectiveness of adult stem cell transplant as a treatment for congestive heart failure; as a way to minimize heart damage after a heart attack; and in the formation of new blood vessels (angiogenesis) to increase blood flow to the heart for patients experiencing che
Clinical Cardiovascular Cell Therapy program, Dib and collaborating
cardiology faculty plan to conduct
clinical studies in a number of areas, including the effectiveness of adult stem cell transplant as a treatment for congestive heart failure; as a way to minimize heart damage after a heart attack; and in the formation of new blood vessels (angiogenesis) to increase blood flow to the heart for patients experiencing che
clinical studies in a number
of areas, including the effectiveness
of adult stem cell transplant as a treatment for congestive heart failure; as a way to minimize heart damage after a heart attack; and in the formation
of new blood vessels (angiogenesis) to increase blood flow to the heart for patients experiencing chest pain.
Cardiology Chief Douglas L. Mann, MD, says this
clinical research consortium is one
of only nine regional centers across the country investigating innovative treatments for heart failure.
Her main research interests are in the area
of clinical health psychology and women's health and her work focuses on the psychological understanding and development
of interventions for people with physical and emotional problems, in the areas
of women's health (PMS and menopause),
cardiology and oncology.
«Given the broad and growing use
of smartwatches and ready accessibility
of downloadable mobile applications, this approach may ultimately be applied to efficiently screen for AF,» said senior author Gregory Marcus, MD, MAS, a UCSF Health cardiologist and director
of clinical research in the UCSF Division
of Cardiology.
Lars Wallentin is Professor
of Cardiology at Uppsala University Hospital and the Uppsala
Clinical Research Centre (UCR) at Uppsala University.
ACCF / AHA / ACR / SCAI / SIR / SVM / SVN / SVS 2010 performance measures for adults with peripheral artery disease: a report
of the American College
of Cardiology Foundation / American Heart Association Task Force on Performance Measures, the American College
of Radiology, the Society for Cardiac Angiography and Interventions, the Society for Interventional Radiology, the Society for Vascular Medicine, the Society for Vascular Nursing, and the Society for Vascular Surgery (Writing Committee to Develop
Clinical Performance Measures for Peripheral Artery Disease)
Note that American College
of Cardiology's recommendation
of «supportive therapy and
clinical trials», which can be exactly translated as «Try to make the patients comfortable while they get worse, and hope that somebody discovers something that can help».
We have experts on those topics at Emory
Clinical Cardiovascular Research Institute: ECCRI co-director Arshed Quyyumi, MD and Laurence Sperling, MD, Director
of Preventive
Cardiology at the Emory Clinic.
From the Department
of Medicine, Division
of Hematology, Brigham and Women's Hospital (S.J., A.J.S., M.M.) and Harvard Medical School (B.L.E.), the Department
of Medicine, Division
of Cardiovascular Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital (E.S.) and Harvard Medical School (G.K.S., P.L.), the Department
of Pathology (S.J.) and the Center for Genomic Medicine (P.N., S.K.), Massachusetts General Hospital, the Department
of Medicine, Division
of Cardiology, and Cardiovascular Research Center (P.N., S.K.), and the Department
of Medicine (A.G.B.), Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, and the Departments
of Medical Oncology (C.J.G.) and Biostatistics and Computational Biology (D.N.), Dana - Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, and the Program in Medical and Population Genetics, Broad Institute
of Harvard and Massachusetts Institute
of Technology, Cambridge (P.N., A.G.B., N.G., S.G., S.K.)- all in Massachusetts; the Department
of Cardiology, University Hospital, Parma, Italy (D.A.); the Department
of Medicine, Division
of Cardiology, Mt. Sinai School
of Medicine, New York (U.B., R.M., V.F.); Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Cardiovasculares Carlos III, Madrid (V.F.); Medical Research Council - British Heart Foundation Cardiovascular Epidemiology Unit and National Institute for Health Research Blood and Transplant Research Unit in Donor Health and Genomics, Department
of Public Health and Primary Care, and the British Heart Foundation, Cambridge Centre
of Excellence, Department
of Medicine, University
of Cambridge, Cambridge (J.D.), and the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, Wellcome Trust Genome Campus, Hinxton (J.D.)- both in the United Kingdom; the Center for Non-Communicable Diseases, Karachi, Pakistan (P.F., D.S.); the Department
of Biostatistics and Epidemiology, University
of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia (D.S.); and the Department
of Clinical Sciences Malmö, Lund University, Lund, Sweden (O.M.).
SOURCES: Howard Weintraub, MD,
clinical associate professor, department
of medicine, Leon H. Charney Division
of Cardiology, NYU Langone Medical Center, New York City; Stephen J. Green MD, associate chairman, department of cardiology, North Shore University Hospital, Manhasset, NY; Montefiore Medical Center, news release, Oct
Cardiology, NYU Langone Medical Center, New York City; Stephen J. Green MD, associate chairman, department
of cardiology, North Shore University Hospital, Manhasset, NY; Montefiore Medical Center, news release, Oct
cardiology, North Shore University Hospital, Manhasset, NY; Montefiore Medical Center, news release, Oct. 24, 2012
Marcus is director
of clinical research at the University
of California, San Francisco's division
of cardiology.
«It appears that alcohol is not necessarily all good or all bad for the heart — it's more complex than that,» said senior author Dr. Gregory Marcus, director
of clinical research for the University
of California, San Francisco Division
of Cardiology.
In the study, which was published today in the journal
Clinical Cardiology, researchers analyzed death records in Los Angeles County for the two weeks following the 1980 and 1984 Super Bowls, both
of which featured teams from Los Angeles.
Dr. Sorrentino has a large
clinical practice in general
cardiology with a focus on prevention at the University
of Chicago Hospitals.
That's concerning, says Dr. Gregory Marcus, one
of the study's authors and director
of clinical research for the division
of cardiology at University
of California, San Francisco.
He has authored or co-authored numerous manuscripts published across leading journals such as the American Journal
of Cardiology, the Journal
of Clinical Lipidology, and the International Journal
of Women's Health.
The following two years consist
of specialized academic courses (i.e.
cardiology, gynecology, gastroenterology, urology, etc), as well as
clinical training at the affiliated university clinic.
Additionally, a Japanese study published in the October 2008 issue
of The Journal
of Cardiology examined the
clinical effectiveness and safety
of infrared blood pressure therapy, as compared to standard therapies for patients with chronic heart failure.
For a report published in the European Journal
of Preventative
Cardiology in 2015, researchers analyzed previously published
clinical trials on mind - body practices, including meditation.
The training consists
of comprehensive study
of the conventional medical sciences including: anatomy, physiology, pathology, microbiology, immunology,
clinical and physical diagnosis, laboratory diagnosis,
cardiology, gastroenterology, gynecology, etc..
He has also completed certificate training in cardio - metabolic medicine from the American Academy
of Anti-Aging Medicine, is an active member
of the Society for Heart Attack Prevention and Eradication (SHAPE), serves as a
clinical consultant for Boston Heart Diagnostics Lab, and is a contributing editor in
cardiology for The Natural Medicine Journal.
Vice Chancellor
Clinical and Translational Research Director, Duke Translational Medicine Institute Professor
of Medicine Division
of Cardiology Duke University Medical Center
Dr. Kahn also serves as a
Clinical Professor
of Medicine in
Cardiology at the Wayne State University School
of Medicine, and Associate Professor
of Medicine at Oakland University Beaumont School
of Medicine.
A study published in March 2015 in the Journal
of the American College
of Cardiology cites
clinical data showing that even in the absence
of an actual increase in blood pressure, excess sodium in the diet could harm the body, including blood vessels (for example, increased arterial stiffness), the heart (enlarged heart muscle), the kidneys (reduced renal function), and the brain (adverse sympathetic nervous system reactions).
Associate Professor and Associate Chair for Instruction — SA
Cardiology University
of Florida College
of Veterinary Medicine Dept.
of Small Animal
Clinical Sciences PO Box 100126 2015 SW 16th Ave Gainesville, FL 32608
The areas
of specialty available at VCVREC are Acupuncture,
Cardiology,
Clinical Pathology, Emergency Medicine, Internal Medicine, Nuclear Medicine, Oncology, Ophthalmology, and Surgery.
Other veterinary specialists are available at the Terry Center to provide support and consultation for internal medicine patients in the areas
of radiology, ultrasonography,
clinical pathology,
clinical pharmacology, neurology, ophthalmology,
cardiology, critical care, oncology, dermatology, nutrition, behavior, dentistry and oral surgery, general and orthopedic surgery.
Dr. SeungWoo Jung, assistant professor in the Department
of Clinical Sciences and a
cardiology clinician in the Wilford and Kate Bailey Small Animal Teaching Hospital, was awarded the Zoetis Distinguished Teaching Award this past spring.
VCS is the largest department in in the college with over 50 faculty members that have
clinical expertise in a wide array
of clinical veterinary specialty disciplines including small and large animal internal medicine, large and small animal surgery, production medicine, diagnostic imaging, ophthalmology,
cardiology, neurology, critical care, dermatology, and behavior.