The predominance of women in the world is an uncontested reality that is causing changes in different aspects of daily life. In the world of interventional cardiology, the number of women compared to men has always been very low. However, this process is slowly beginning to change because more and more women are showing their...
Heart and Brain: Risk Factors, Atrial Fibrillation and Dementia
For decades, physiologists have known what cardiologists often forget: heart and brain communicate intensely in a healthy person, and in a wide range of cardiovascular diseases they could damage one another. Multiple actions and immediate reactions in the brain adequately adapt heart function to bodily needs, such as anxiety and frustration, which might impair adequate...
The Most Read Articles in Interventional Cardiology in SOLACI
1- What to Do with Blood Pressure Levels Between 130/80 and 139/89 mmHg The decision to be made with a treatment-free patient with systolic blood pressure over 160 mmHg or diastolic blood pressure over 100 mmHg is an easy one. All guidelines agree: treatment should be started immediately alongside lifestyle changes. Read also HERE 2- Low-Risk...
500 Years after What Might Have Been the Start of Modern Cardiology
500 years have passed since Leonardo da Vinci passed away (1452–1519), which is why we believe this is the perfect time to remember his passionate effort to study the human heart. Not only was Leonardo a gifted artist, but also an innovative engineer and inventor, a pioneer far ahead of his time. His scientific exploration...
New Risk Factors: Air Pollution, Air Temperature, Pain, and Sleep Hours
Traditionally, we have used age, gender, obesity, hypertension, dyslipidemia, smoking, and diabetes as cardiovascular risk factors. However, this new era (during which the changes made to care for our shared home, the planet, will play a key role) has seen the emergence of new factors such as pollution, noise, temperature, sleep hours, and air quality....
The Most Relevant Articles of 2018 in Peripheral Vascular Disease
1- What’s New in the European Guidelines on Peripheral Arterial Disease Since the last version of the European guidelines on the diagnosis and treatment of peripheral arterial disease in 2011, there have been many trials and registries that warrant guideline adjustments in many aspects. The first novelty is the teamwork that gave way to these...
TCT 2018 | PARTNER 2 Valve-in-Valve: Clinical and Hemodynamic Results Maintained in the Long Term
The 1-year follow-up for this study was published last year in JACC, and it showed that transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) in failed bioprosthetic valves has low rates of complications, boosts significant hemodynamic improvement, and results in relatively low mortality. Now, the 3-year results are presented at TCT 2018. The study followed 365 patients who underwent valve-in-valve...
EXCEL Sub-Study: The Site of the Left Main Coronary Artery Lesion Does Not Alter History
The EXCEL study, originally presented at TCT 2016 and published simultaneously in the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM), showed that angioplasty and surgery in patients with left main coronary artery disease have similar rates of mortality, infarction, and stroke at 3 years. This sub-study, recently published in J Am Coll Cardiol Intv, adds that the...
Live Cases, Edited Cases and Lunch Symposiums Sponsored by the Industry
The participation of the medical industry is, undoubtedly, one of the most appealing aspects of the SOLACI-SOCIME 2018 Congress. As usual, the most important companies in this industry have decided to take part in our event. Their contribution is most valuable, as it brings relevance and improves the quality of our scientific presentations. Organize your...
Missed Opportunities with Patients with Peripheral Vascular Disease
Little is known about how good are our counseling efforts on medication use and lifestyle as regards patients with peripheral vascular disease. More often than not, we use our time with these patients to discuss the technical feasibility of rechanneling, or to analyze the risk of eventual amputation. However, how often do we seize the...