Adult care for congenital heart disease patients should begin in adolescence • Heart Disease news • Mar 01 11 Doctors should transition their patients from pediatric to adult medical care for congenital heart disease during early adolescence, experts recommend in a scientific statement published in… Newborn heart muscle can grow back by itself, UT Southwestern researchers have found • Heart Disease news • Feb 25 11 In a promising science-fiction-meets-real-world juxtaposition, researchers at UT Southwestern Medical Center have discovered that the mammalian newborn heart can heal itself completely. Researchers, working… Protein could be new target to reduce damage after heart attack • Heart Disease news • Feb 25 11 Scientists have identified a protein that plays a key role in debilitating changes that occur in the heart after a heart attack, according to research reported… Middle-Aged Hearts Are in Poor Shape • Heart Disease news • Feb 25 11 Most Americans have poor heart health by the time they’re middle aged, and that’s especially true for African-Americans, a new study suggests. Only one out of 1,933 people evaluated in Pennsylvania’s… Dirty air triggers more heart attacks than cocaine • Heart Disease news • Feb 24 11 Air pollution triggers more heart attacks than using cocaine and poses as high a risk of sparking a heart attack as alcohol, coffee and physical exertion, scientists said on… Scientists identify new marker for heart disease • Heart Disease news • Feb 23 11 A new study from the Libin Cardiovascular Institute at the University of Calgary’s Faculty of Medicine is shedding light on an underlying cause of heart disease. Published research led by… Aspirin, Cost-Effective Heart Disease Prevention • Heart Disease news • Feb 23 11 Using aspirin for coronary heart prevention is less costly and more effective than doing nothing in men older than 45 with more than 10 percent 10-year-risk of the disease, according to a… Many stick with fast food after heart attack: study • Heart Disease news • Feb 22 11 It would seem logical for patients who have had a heart attack to cut back on fast food. Some devoted fast food eaters do. But six months later,… Stent blood clot risk may be higher in the morning • Heart Disease news • Feb 22 11 For people who have recently had a stent implanted in a blocked heart artery, the risk of developing a blood clot may be higher early in the… Gender Does Not Increase Risk of Death from Heart Attack • Heart Disease news • Feb 22 11 A study led by the University of Michigan Cardiovascular Center shows being a woman may not increase your risk of dying from treatment for a severe heart… Cancer-related pathways reveal potential treatment target for congenital heart disease • Heart Disease news • Feb 21 11 Cross-disciplinary teams of scientists studying genetic pathways that are mutated in many forms of cancer, but which also cause certain forms of congenital heart disease – including… ‘Healthy’ patients at high risk of cardiac death identified • Heart Disease news • Feb 15 11 The way the heart responds to an early beat is predictive of cardiac death, especially for people with no conventional markers of cardiovascular disease, according to new research… Updated heart disease prevention guidelines for women focus more on ‘real-world’ recommendations • Heart Disease news • Feb 15 11 Practical medical advice that works in the “real world” may more effectively prevent cardiovascular disease in women than recommendations based only on findings in clinical… Heart Patients Should be Referred to Cardiac Rehabilitation Before Leaving Hospital • Heart Disease news • Feb 14 11 Healthcare practitioners can increase the number of patients with heart disease referred to a cardiac rehabilitation program by 40 per cent, helping them to reduce their… Cancer breakthrough to prevent heart failure and increase survival rates • Heart Disease news • Feb 10 11 A breakthrough by scientists at Queen’s University Belfast could help reduce heart failure in cancer patients around the world, and ultimately increase survival rates. Scientists at Queen’s… Short time on antipsychotics may up heart disease • Heart Disease news • Feb 10 11 Antipsychotic medications, which have raised red flags in the past, may increase the risk of heart disease in as little as a few months, a new study says. Among… Drug-eluting stents are preferred therapy for revascularization of chronic total occlusions • Heart Disease news • Feb 09 11 A systematic review of medical evidence has determined drug-eluting stents (DES) outperform bare metal stents (BMS) for revascularization of chronic total occlusions. Researchers found coated stents… Therapy to prevent heart failure more effective in women than men • Heart Disease news • Feb 08 11 A new study, published today in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology, found that women receive a significantly greater benefit – a 70 percent… Findings of global study on obesity, heart risks • Heart Disease news • Feb 07 11 Worldwide rates of obesity have nearly doubled since 1980, but rich Western nations have made good progress in lowering hypertension and cholesterol, according to a large study of key… New Pulmonary Valve Delays Need for Open-Heart Surgery • Heart Disease news • Feb 03 11 Congenital heart defects are the most common type of major birth defects in the U.S., affecting about 34,000 babies each year. Twenty percent of these patients are born with… Rapid Response Team Prepares for Snow Shoveling Heart Attacks • Heart Disease news • Feb 03 11 Loyola’s innovative Heart Attack Rapid Response Team (HARRT) is on staff 24/7 to perform emergency surgery on patients who have experienced heart attacks from shoveling snow or other… Vegans’ elevated heart risk requires omega-3s and B12 • Heart Disease news • Feb 02 11 People who follow a vegan lifestyle — strict vegetarians who try to eat no meat or animal products of any kind — may increase their risk of developing blood… When 2 rights make a wrong: Combating childhood heart disease • Heart Disease news • Feb 01 11 When the body can’t distinguish its right side from its left during development, a child can develop a condition called heterotaxy in which the heart is severely… Phone counseling can help lower heart disease risk • Heart Disease news • Jan 31 11 A greater percentage of people at high risk for heart disease keep up their exercise and diet programs when they get group telephone counseling, a new study says. Everyone… Super Bowl losses can increase cardiac death • Heart Disease news • Jan 31 11 A new study published in the journal Clinical Cardiology reveals that a Super Bowl loss for a home team was associated with increased death rates in both men and women… Page 24 of 73 pages « First < 22 23 24 25 26 > Last » << Back to main