To Collaborate Scientific Professionals around the World – Cardiology

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Cardiology is a branch of medicine deals with disorders of the heart as well as parts of the circulatory system. The Section of Clinical Cardiology access to specialized inpatient and outpatient heart care and treatment of heart problems such as angina, artery problems, valvular heart disease, and heart failure. The one who specialize in this field of medicine are called cardiologists, primary mission is to deliver high quality, cardiovascular care to all of our patients. Paediatric cardiologist is paediatricians who have received extensive training in diagnosing and treating children's cardiac problems. Doctors who specialized specializes in surgical procedures of the heart, lungs are called cardiac surgeons, who can be called cardiac surgeons. Clinical Cardiology is an American journal about Cardiology founded in 1978. It provides a forum for the coordination of clinical research in diagnostics, cardiovascular medicine and cardiovascular surgery.

  • Cardiovascular Medicine
  • Modern practices in cardiovascular therapy
  • Cardiac progenitor cells
  • Percutaneous Coronary Intervention (Pci)
  • Hypertension for the primary care clinician
  • Preventive Medicine

Interventional cardiology is a branch of cardiology with one to two years of additional education and training in diagnosing and treating cardiovascular disease as well as congenital (present at birth) and structural heart conditions through catheter-based procedures such as angioplasty and stenting that deals specifically with the catheter based treatment of structural heart diseases. The event that began the revolution in cardiology was the performance of coronary interventions by Andreas Gruentzig in 1977. It is a non-surgical option which uses a catheter – a small, flexible tube – to repair damaged or weakened vessels, narrowed arteries, or other affected parts of the heart structure. The interventional cardiology or radiology procedures are generally less invasive than traditional surgery. In most cases, these procedures require only one small incision for insertion of the catheter. Most of the patients do not require general anesthesia and some operation can take as few as 30 minutes to perform and avoidance of the scars and pain, and long post-operative recovery. Interventional Cardiology procedure involves small incision in the arm or groin and threads a catheter into a blood vessel. The catheter is then guided through the blood vessel to the heart and also a collapsed stent is placed over the balloon at the tip of the catheter. When the balloon inflates, the stent pops open and reinforces the artery walls. The balloon and catheter are then withdrawn and the stent remains permanently. Coronary intervention has not fully matured. Stents with three components (metal, polymer, and drug) have been highly successful. The dream has in part been realized by the development of completely bioresorbable stents. The procedures of today may seem crude in the distant future there are dreams that remain to be realized. Others have not yet been dreamed.

  • Cardiac catheterization
  • Angioplasty/Percutaneous coronary intervention
  • Stent procedure
  • Percutaneous valve repair
  • Embolic protection
  • Balloon valvuloplasty
  • Atherectomy
  • Coronary thrombectomy
  • Peripheral Arterial Diseases

Media Contact:
John Mathews
Journal Manager
Current Trends in Cardiology
Email: cardiologyres@eclinicalsci.com