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New study shows non-optimal temperature is a significant contributor to cardiovascular disease burden globally

Medical Xpress

A new study by physician-scientists at University Hospitals (UH) Harrington Heart & Vascular Institute has shown that non-optimal temperatures have a significant impact on the cardiovascular disease (CVD) burden across the globe.

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Scientists find genetic link to clogged arteries

Scienmag

But now, scientists at Washington University School of Medicine in St. […].

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Integrating Bioanalytical Automation, Biomarkers, Pharmacogenomics, & Cost-Effective Strategies

Worldwide Clinical Trials

Compared with a skilled scientist capable of processing 60 samples per day, full automation delivers accurate data from up to 480 samples daily. We support efficacy markers, safety biomarkers, diagnostic biomarkers, and pharmacodynamic (PD) markers, addressing diverse therapeutic areas such as neurology, oncology, immunology, and cardiology.

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'Vein-on-a-chip' could help scientists study thrombosis without animal models

Medical Xpress

Blood clot researchers could benefit from a new device that mimics a human vein, replacing the need for animals for some studies.

Scientist 109
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Scientists warn of links between soil pollution and heart disease

Scienmag

Sophia Antipolis, 1 July 2022: Pesticides and heavy metals in soil may have detrimental effects on the cardiovascular system, according to a review paper published today in Cardiovascular Research, a journal of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC).1

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Scientists created technology to detect and treat complex arrhythmias

Scienmag

This is a unique method to diagnose pathogenic areas in the heart in a minute Credit: Front. Researchers from Belgium, the Netherlands, Russia, and Italy have developed a breakthrough method for quickly, accurately, and reliably diagnosing cardiac arrhythmias. They called it Directed graph mapping (DGM).

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Anti-aging gene shown to rewind heart age by ten years

Medical Xpress

The breakthrough, published in Cardiovascular Research and led by scientists at the University of Bristol and the MultiMedica Group in Italy, offers a potential target for patients with heart failure. An anti-aging gene discovered in a population of centenarians has been shown to rewind the heart's biological age by 10 years.

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