According to a study, heart failure patients are more likely to pass away from their condition on polluted days and for up to two days afterwards.
The research was presented at Heart Failure 2023, the European Society of Cardiology's (ESC) scientific conference.
While some individuals are able to recover from the consequences of SARS-CoV-2 infection, others have continued to endure COVID-19 aftereffects for a very long time. The inability to exercise as much is one of these persistent COVID symptoms. But there are still unanswered issues about the r
According to findings presented at Heart Failure 2023, a scientific congress of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC), women are more than twice as likely as males to die following a heart attack.
According to findings presented at Heart Failure 2023, a scientific congress of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC), people with powerful legs are less likely to develop heart failure following a heart attack.
In accordance with data presented today at Heart Failure 2023, a scientific conference of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC), people with powerful legs are less likely to get heart failure following a heart attack.
In patients with chronic heart failure, remote pulmonary artery pressure monitoring improves the quality of life and lowers the number of heart failure hospitalisations, according to the first investigator-initiated study on the topic. The research was released in The Lancet and was presente
New Delhi [India], May 18 (ANI/PNN): Dr Shelby Kutty, the Director of the Helen B Taussig Heart Centre at Johns Hopkins University, visited Frontier Lifeline Hospital, Dr KM Cherian Heart Foundation today. Dr Shelby Kutty gave a talk on the role of AI in cardiology and highlighted the potent
A small randomised experiment in individuals with post-COVID syndrome discovered that hyperbaric oxygen therapy improves the heart's capacity to contract normally.
According to new research published today in European Heart Journal - Digital Health, a journal of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC), talking on a cell phone for 30 minutes or more per week is associated with a 12% increased risk of high blood pressure compared to less than 30 minutes
According to the authorities, the recipient was evaluated in the Department of Cardio Thoracic Vascular Surgery (CTVS) and Cardiology, and diagnosed with advanced heart failure due to severe coronary artery disease in March.