35th World Congress on Cardiology & Heart Diseases
Meet world best 50+ cardiologist on 35th World Congress on Cardiology & Heart Diseases March 22-23, 2023 at London, UK
Overview
Conference Series LLC Ltd cordially invites all international attendees and sponsors to the "35th World Congress on Cardiology & Heart Diseases" on March 22-23, 2023. The main topic and theme of the conference are "Reconnoitering Challenges in Prediction and Prevention of Heart Diseases." CARDIOLOGY CONGRESS 2023's goal is to bring together renowned cardiologists, online visitors from the field of cardiovascular research and clinical cardiology, including researchers, academicians, and business professionals, as well as students and business delegates, under one roof to share knowledge, advance science, and shape future research.
Cardiovascular Surgery
Cardiovascular surgery, also known as thoracic surgery, is a branch of medicine that involves the surgical treatment of organs within the thorax and is performed by cardiac surgeons on the heart or major vessels. Cardiac surgery is classified into five types. Minimally invasive surgery and surgeries are performed to treat the complexity of ischemic heart disease, correct congenital heart disease, or treat vascular heart disease caused by a variety of causes such as endocarditis, rheumatic heart disease, and atherosclerosis. Advances in cardiac surgery and cardiopulmonary bypass techniques have significantly reduced these procedures' mortality rates. The surgery necessitates postoperative care to avoid complications. Laceration treatment is necessary to avoid infection and scarring. Swelling and loss of appetite are common, as previously stated. Coronary artery bypass grafting is the most common type of heart surgery (CABG). CABG improves blood flow to the heart.
Current Research in Cardiology
Cardiology conferences raise awareness about the importance of modifying risk factors for heart disease. Cardiovascular services can help with cardiovascular disease prevention, management, and treatment. Its primary goal is to reduce premature death in people who are at risk of cardiovascular disease. The primary treatment of cardiovascular disease can be achieved by concentrating on dietary and lifestyle changes. The likelihood of effective treatment increases with early diagnosis. An investigation into ethnic and socioeconomic disparities in cardiovascular disease and the risks associated with it.
Congenital Heart Disease
Congenital heart disease is a heart defect that occurs at birth. Cardiac abnormalities are primarily caused by abnormal heart and circulatory system development before birth. A number of factors, such as infection and the mother's use of certain drugs during pregnancy, can result in abnormal development. Some congenital cardiac abnormalities are genetic in nature and can be passed down through families as autosomal or sex-linked traits.
Keynote Speaker
- Damien Byas, Center for Healthcare and Organizational Research, USA
- Mark Kearney, Leeds School of Medicine England
- Mila Jakovljevic, Polyclinic for Cardiovascular Diseases and Prevention, Croatia
- Nina Gorshunova, Kursk State Medical University, Russia
Best Places to Visit
Tower Bridge
Tower Bridge is a movable bridge of the double-leaf bascule type that spans the River Thames between the boroughs of Tower Hamlets and Southward in Greater London. It is a distinct landmark that complements the Tower of London, to which it is adjacent.
The bridge was finished in 1894. It is approximately 240 meters (800 feet) long and has a width of 76 meters (250 feet). Its twin towers soar 61 meters (200 feet) above the River Thames. A pair of glass-covered walkways connect the towers and are popular with tourists. The walkways were originally intended to allow pedestrians to cross even while the bridge was being raised, but they became a haven for prostitutes and thieves and were thus closed from 1909 to 1982. Until 1976, the Tower Bridge was powered by steam-powered hydraulic pumps. When electric motors were introduced, the steam power system was preserved (in good condition) as a tourist attraction. However, due to a decrease in shipping at the London Docklands, the leaves are now rarely raised
Buckingham Palace
Buckingham Palace is a London palace. It is located in central London's City of Westminster.
The Palace is the main official residence of the British monarch, where he or she lives and works. State occasions and royal hospitality are held at the palace. It has served as a focal point for the British people during times of national celebration and crisis.
Buckingham Palace was built as a townhouse residence in London in 1703 by John Sheffield, 1st Duke of Buckingham and Normandy. In 1761, the British royal family purchased it. It became the family's official London residence in 1837 and was greatly expanded in the nineteenth century. There are 775 rooms, 19 staterooms, and 78 bathrooms on board. The Mall is a ceremonial road that leads up to it. During the London Blitz, a German bomb damaged the Palace.
British Museum
The British Museum is a comprehensive national museum in London with particularly strong holdings in archaeology and ethnography. It is situated in the Camden borough's Bloomsbury district.
The museum was founded by an act of Parliament in 1753 on three collections: those of Sir Hans Sloane, Robert Harley, the 1st Earl of Oxford, and Sir Robert Cotton. Montagu House, Great Russell Street, housed the collections (which also included a significant number of manuscripts and other library materials) and opened to the public in 1759. Sir Robert Smirke designed the current museum building in the Greek Revival style, which was built on the site of Montagu House between 1823 and 1852 and has been the subject of several subsequent additions and alterations. Its famous round Reading Room was built in the 1850s, and scholars such as Karl Marx, Virginia Woolf, Peter Kropotkin, and Thomas Carlyle worked beneath its copper dome. The original natural history collections were transferred to a new building in South Kensington in 1881 to form the Natural History Museum, and by an act of Parliament in 1973, the British Museum's library was joined with a number of other holdings to form the British Library Approximately half of the national library's holdings were kept at the museum until a new library building at St. Pancreas opened in 1997.
St Paul’s Cathedral
Saint Paul's Cathedral is the Church of England's Cathedral in London. The current structure is a domed church with a lot of open space, designed in a restrained style that combines Neoclassical, Gothic, and Baroque elements. Christopher Wren designed it and built it out of Portland stone (1675-1710). The structure replaced Old St. Paul's, which was destroyed in the Great Fire of 1666. The interior is distinguished by master crafts people’s ironwork and woodcarving. The majestic dome rises 365 feet and is set on a colonnaded drum (111 m). Wren's superbly detailed cathedral bears only a passing resemblance to the accepted Classical-Gothic design; why this so remains a mystery.
Past Affiliates
Jinhu Wang (Assistant Professor Emory University School of Medicine USA)
Jinhu Wang is an Assistant Professor of Medicine at Emory University. He earned a PhD in Developmental Biology from the Chinese Academy of Science. He did his postdoctoral research at Duke University in Dr. Kenneth Poss.’s lab. His overarching research goal is to discover new targets that highlight the regenerative deficiencies in mammals by understanding how regenerative responses to injury have been optimized in non-mammalian vertebrates such as zebrafish. His research has recently focused on the regenerative biology of two major adult cardiac tissues: the myocardium and the epicardium.
OVIDIO A GARCÍA VILLARREAL (Professor of Cardiovascular Surgery Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México)
Ovidio A. Garcia Villarreal is a cardiac surgeon in private practice who previously worked in social medicine. Surgery. He has been performing mitral, aortic, and tricuspid reconstructions for over 25 years. In Mexico, he has been a pioneer in cardiac arrhythmia surgery, particularly in atrial fibrillation surgery (Cox-maze procedure) and aortic valve-sparing operations. He has carried out national surgical models for valvular heart disease. heart reconstruction and maze procedure. He has also been involved in clinical research, with over 50 international publications in PubMed. In Mexico, he is the editor-in-chief of the journal Cirugia Cardiac and an analyst for more than 15 international journals. He is a member of the Mexican Society of Cardiac Surgery, the Society of Thoracic Surgeons, and the European Association of Cardiothoracic Surgery, among other organizations.
Christine Gasperetti (interventional cardiologist University of Pennsylvania Health System USA)
Christine Gasperetti is a cardiologist who specializes in high-risk and protected coronary intervention, as well as acute myocardial infarction. She has participated in numerous studies on coronary artery disease and platelet function during coronary intervention. She is a member of the University of Pennsylvania Health System and works at a number of its hospitals and affiliates.
Miguel Garber (President of Spanish Society of Regenerative Medicine and Cell Therapy Spain)
Cardiac Anesthesia Institute of Postgraduate Medical Education and Research, Cardiac Anesthesia Kolkata, West Bengal, India
Salah A. Mohamed (Associate Professor UKSH-Campus Luebeck Germany)
Salah A. Mohamed, Laboratory and Group Leader in the Department of Cardiac and Thoracic Vascular Surgery at the University Clinic of Schleswig-Holstein, Campus Luebeck in Germany, the group's research interests include aortic and aortic valve diseases, atrial fibrillation, aging, and biomarkers. He has over 25 papers published in prestigious journals and is a member of a prestigious editorial board.
Market Analysis
According to GBI Research, the cardiovascular disease market, which includes a variety of disorders such as hypertension, coronary artery disorders, cardiac arrest, dyslipidemia, and thrombotic events, is expected to grow from $129.2 billion in 2015 to $146.4 billion by 2022, at a very modest compound annual growth rate of 1.8%.
The global cardiology market was valued at USD 116.9 billion in 2017 and is expected to grow at a CAGR of 7.4% between 2017 and 2022. Among the fundamental factors expected to drive development over the forecast period are an increase in the prevalence of Congenital Heart Defects and the presence of technologically advanced cardiology and cardiovascular valves, grafts, and patches.