Ohio heart center 1st in world to study efficacy of diastolic heart failure treatment

Loading

Columbus-based Ohio State University’s Richard M. Ross Heart Hospital is the first in the world to study the clinical benefits of a device used to treat diastolic heart failure.

Diastolic heart failure occurs when the heart muscle becomes stiff and does not allow blood to flow from the lungs into the heart. This causes blood to flood the first lower left heart chamber, then the upper left chamber and into the lungs.
Read more in Becker’s Hospital Review.

Loading

My Son Is Enjoying the Thrill of Freedom This Holiday Season

Loading

What life is like following heart and double-lung transplant

Slowly, you begin to ascend. At first, you can’t even see the apex of your destination, so already you’re feeling anxious. As the climb steepens, you feel ambivalent, wanting to brave it out but also wondering if it’s too late to get off this ride.

At the top, your stomach drops, your heart pounds, your fists are glued to the safety bar, your eyes widen, and you whisper a final prayer, “Oh God, help me!” Read the full article from Pulmonary Hypertension News.

Loading

UCSF Health Reaches 20,000 Organ Transplants

Loading

Cardiovascular Surgeons Perform the Health System’s First Donation After Circulatory Death Heart Transplant

UC San Francisco surgeons have performed the health system’s 20,000th solid organ transplant, making it just the third in the nation to reach that milestone. The surgery also marked UCSF Health’s first donation after circulatory death (DCD) heart transplant, a procedure performed by only about twenty health systems in the U.S. Read more from UCSF Health.

Loading

Innovation Is Critical to Stop Disparities in Diabetes Care

Loading

— We must explore how new technologies can help

Having spent over 30 years of my career in diabetes, first as a practicing diabetologist and later as a diabetes researcher, I’ve met many people with diabetes. And while diabetes care has evolved significantly over that time, I’m amazed that for many people, daily insulin management remains just as complex and manual as it was all those years ago, particularly for individuals with type 2 diabetes (T2D). Read more in MedPage Today.

Loading

Yoga Flexes Muscle for Those With High Blood Pressure

Loading

— BP lowering and other effects suggest it’s more than a stretching exercise

Yoga provided extra blood pressure (BP) lowering and other benefits when added to a regular exercise routine, a small pilot trial showed.

At one exercise rehabilitation center, hypertensive patients who were randomized to an additional 15 minutes of yoga, in lieu of extra stretching during supervised training sessions, showed improvements at 3 months in terms of:

  • BP: -11/8 mm Hg from 130/77 mm Hg with yoga vs -4/3 mm Hg from 126/76 mm Hg with stretching (P<0.001)

Read the full story in MedPage Today here.

Loading