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Top 10 cardiology headlines of September
Here are the top 10 cardiology stories Becker's covered in September: -
Michigan health system receives $8.8M for telerobotics in rural areas
Grand Rapids, Mich.-based BHSH Spectrum Health West Michigan received a $8.8 million grant to improve and expand robotic-assisted coronary procedures in rural areas. -
UCSF heart center names interventional cardiology chief
San Francisco-based UCSF Health's Heart and Vascular Center welcomed Sammy Elmariah, MD, as chief of interventional cardiology and medical director of cardiac catheterization labs. -
5 heart center updates
Here are five heart center openings and upgrades since Aug. 30: -
How virtual cardiac rehab can improve patient outcomes and loyalty while mitigating staffing shortages
Cardiac rehabilitation improves long-term health outcomes for cardiac patients. However, the number of brick-and-mortar cardiac rehab centers is limited and can only serve about half of the patients who need cardiac rehab. Meanwhile, the number of cardiac patients is steadily rising. -
Dr. Rakesh Arora joins University Hospitals
Cleveland-based University Hospitals Harrington Heart & Vascular Institute hired Dr. Rakesh Arora as director of perioperative and cardiac critical care and research director in the division of cardiac surgery. -
Forrest Health, clinic open Mississippi's 1st outpatient heart surgery center
Hattiesburg, Miss.-based Forrest Health and Hattiesburg Clinic partnered to open Mississippi's first outpatient heart surgery center, CBS affiliate WJTV reported Sept. 28. -
9 recent heart study findings
Here are nine heart study findings covered by Becker's since Sept. 15: -
Wellstar launches aortic program
Marietta, Ga.-based Wellstar Health System launched an aortic program designed to provide both emergency and nonemergent care for aortic diseases. -
St. Joseph's Health names surgery vice chairman
Eric Choi, MD, has been appointed vice chairman of the department of surgery and a member of the division of vascular surgery at Paterson, N.J.-based St. Joseph's Health. -
Study links coffee with longevity, lower risk of heart disease
Drinking two to three cups of coffee a day is linked to longer lifespan and lower risk of cardiovascular disease compared with non-coffee drinkers, Science Daily reported Sept. 26. -
Dr. Martha Gulati named director of preventive cardiology at Smidt Heart Institute
Dr. Martha Gulati was named director of preventive cardiology, associate director of the Preventive and Rehabilitative Cardiac Center and associate director of the Barbra Streisand Women’s Heart Center in the Department of Cardiology at Los Angeles-based Smidt Heart Institute. -
Minnesota cardiologist creates healthy snacks to battle heart disease
Minneapolis-based cardiologist Elizabeth Klodas, MD, created foods designed to fight heart disease, NBC affiliate KARE reported Sept. 27. -
6 cardiologists on the move
Here are six cardiologists who have stepped into new roles since Sept. 13: -
Religion, spirituality linked to healthier hearts in Black patients
Mayo Clinic researchers found religious lifestyles and spirituality are linked to healthier heart outcomes in Black patients. -
Frozen embryos linked with risks of high blood pressure in pregnancy
In vitro fertilization using frozen embryos may be associated with a 74 percent higher risk of hypertensive disorders in pregnancy, the American Heart Association reported Sept. 26. -
Micropremie survives open heart surgery at 26 weeks, Stanford reports
Stanford Medicine Children's Health successfully performed open heart surgery on a 26-week-old micropremie, completely removing the heart tumor in only six minutes, Stanford said Sept. 22. -
Brisk walking can reduce risk of heart disease, cancer and even dementia
U.K.-based researchers found that walking is associated with a lower risk of heart disease, cancer and dementia. Brisk walking has even more benefits. -
Lack of sleep raises risk of heart disease, Mount Sinai study says
Consistently not getting enough sleep can throw off immune cell production long term, increasing the risk of heart disease and inflammatory disorders, according to a study from researchers at New York City-based Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. -
Heart cell mutatations start in infancy, leading to possible heart disease, study finds
Boston Children's Hospital researchers found heart muscles accumulate new genetic mutations starting in childhood.
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