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ESC Congress-2018

ESC Congress-2018
  • Date
    25 - 29 August 2018
  • Location
    Munich, Germany
The event was held

Description

ESC Congress has developed into the world’s largest conference in cardiovascular medicine, with a strong global reputation as an event that provides the latest research findings and their interpretation, in-depth science, and solid education.

This year ESC Congress has been a very successful event - over 32,800 delegates from five continents took part in it. The Congress Programme Committee is structuring the finest in science, innovation and research in cardiology into more than 500 sessions and over 4,500 abstract presentations with a world-renowned faculty.

A group of scientists from Tyumen Cardiology Research Center took part in the Congress: Marina Bessonova, MD, Acting Director; Grigoriy Kolunin, MD, PhD, Head of the Department of X-ray Surgical Diagnosis and Treatment No.2; Tatiana Gizatulina, MD, PhD, Senior Scientific Researcher; Nina Shurkevich MD, PhD, Leading Scientific Researcher; Natalia Musikhina, MD, PhD, Head of the Department of Emergency Cardiology of the Scientific Division of Clinical Cardiology.

Dr. Kolunin presented at the Congress moderated poster “Cryoablation of premature ventricular complexes arising from the septal region”.

Dr. Shurkevich had 2 poster presentations. The first study was devoted to the influence of the rhythm of natural illumination (polar day and night) on changes in blood pressure and heart rate in patients - shift workers with arterial hypertension in Arctic conditions. The second presentation also concerned patients with arterial hypertension in conditions of a watch in the Far North. The results of the study showed that they have increased fatigue, meteorological dependence, decreased concentration of attention, memory impairment, disturbance of night sleep, and as a result - structural changes in the myocardium.

One more poster presentation prepared by Georgy Pushkarev, MD, PhD, Scientific Researcher and co-authors was devoted to the study of depression in congestive heart failure patients after interventions. The results showed that depression increased the risk of death even after the surgery.