Videos | Cardiac Diagnostics | October 29, 2019

VIDEO: New Ideas in Addressing Cardiovascular Disease Disparities

Clyde Yancy, M.D., MSc, cardiology chief and vice dean for diversity and inclusion at Northwestern University, Feinberg School of Medicine, was a keynote speaker at the 2019 American Society of Nuclear Cardiology (ASNC) annual meeting. He said the traditional biases of seeing a patient and automatically making clinical assumptions because they are a certain race or gender are obsolete. For example, he said not all black patients have hypertension. Yancy added that genetics, especially with racial intermarriage over the past several generations, no longer predisposes patients to what is typically assumed for certain ethnic or racial backgrounds.

Yancy also said new research is showing how diet plays a major role in patient health and disease progression for things previously thought to be based on genetics. This includes the people who live in "food deserts" in urban areas where there are no sources of fresh food and vegetables, so they consume large amounts of packaged and processed foods that contain high levels of salt, phosphates and preservatives. He said these chemicals and diet may be the root cause of hypertension and diabetes in black populations in low income areas, rather than genetics as previously thought.

 

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Managing Acute Coronary Syndromes in Women: Why and When is a Unique Approach Required features an in-depth interview with Malissa J. Wood, MD, FACC. Wood is the co-director of the Corrigan Women’s Heart Health Program at Massachusetts General Hospital Heart Center, and associate professor at Harvard Medical School. Here, she offers detailed guidance to cardiologists for improving the diagnosing and treatment of heart disease in women. Wood serves as the American College of Cardiology, ACC Chair, Board of Governors, and Secretary, Board of Trustees (2022-2023). This video interview is part of DAIC's One on One ... feature series that profiles a leader in cardiology to share insight, updates and initiatives on a range of hot topics impacting the cardiology community. The series also includes a feature profile and podcast.

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VIDEO: New Ideas in Addressing Cardiovascular Disease Disparities — Clyde Yancy, M.D 

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Enhanced features on the Philips EPIQ CVx ultrasound system provide a next level photorealistic 3D rendering, making it easy for users to interpret what they are seeing. The TrueVue feature enhances the sense of depth and space, producing images that appear natural and realistic to the human eye.  

Watch the video to check out how TrueVue can help improve views of LAA and MV morphology. 

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