A new study found that higher levels of stereotypical male gender expression were associated with a decrease in reported diagnoses and treatment for cardiovascular disease risk factors.
Tag: cardiovascuar health
77-year-old Marathon World-record Holder Showed Elevated VO2Max, Heart Remodeling after Lifetime of Endurance Exercise
Article title: Lifelong physiology of a former marathon world-record holder – the pros and cons of extreme cardiac remodeling Authors: Stephen J. Foulkes, Mark J. Haykowsky, Peter M. Kistler, Glenn McConell, Scott Trappe, Mark Hargreaves, David Costill, André La Gerche…
MSU researchers create more realistic synthetic human mini hearts, gain worldwide recognition
Thanks to advancements in the development of patented synthetic human-like hearts first created at Michigan State, researchers can study human heart development and congenital heart disease on highly accurate models. This is facilitating the development of new therapies and pharmaceutical drugs to treat a variety of heart-related diseases just in time for the observance of American Heart Month in February.
Penn Research Projects Increase in U.S. Cardiovascular Deaths Due to Extreme Heat
The number of heat related cardiovascular deaths in the United States will increase over the next four decades, according to a new analysis from the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania.
Can Technology Help You Keep Watch of Your Heart Health?
Interventional cardiologist Dr. Henry Sun, director of LifeBridge Health’s Cardiovascular Institute, gives the scoop on the heart health monitoring capabilities of smart watches.
Wearable Sensor Powered by AI Predicts Worsening Heart Failure Before Hospitalization
A new wearable sensor that works in conjunction with artificial intelligence technology could help doctors remotely detect critical changes in heart failure patients days before a health crisis occurs and could prevent hospitalization, according to a study led by University of Utah Health and VA Salt Lake City Health Care System scientists.
‘Not-so-stressful’ stress testing evaluates pediatric congenital heart disease and exercise-related complaints
Exercise capacity can be highly predictive of the risk of complications related to CHD, including developing heart failure.