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There are 3741 result(s) for coronary disease mortality
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Truncus arteriosus (TA)
Truncus arteriosus (TA) is a congenital heart defect that means you're born with one large blood vessel instead of two. It causes blood high in oxygen and blood low in oxygen to mix.
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Donate to British Heart Foundation
Find out how to donate to British Heart Foundation, from donating money online to giving in memory or leaving a gift in your will.
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RESEARCH
Studying better ways to identify heart scar tissue causing dangerous heart rhythm disturbancesNewcastle University | Dr Ruairidh Martin
Dr Ruairidh Martin has been awarded a travel fellowship to travel to a hospital in Bordeaux, France, for one year to enhance his research and clinical training. Ventricular tachycardia (VT) is a life-threatening heart rhythm disturbance...
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How can I have a gluten-free diet that is heart-healthy?
Our expert explains what gluten is, what to do when you have an intolerance to it, and how to keep a gluten-free diet heart-healthy.
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Heart patients to benefit from £400,000 grant for state-of-the-art scanning
Cardiology patients and researchers will benefit from state-of-the-art MRI scanning facilities in Edinburgh thanks to a £400,000 grant from the British Heart Foundation (BHF).
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Regardless of your genes a healthy lifestyle cuts stroke risk
New research we've funded shows that people at high risk of having a stroke due to their genetics can still substantially lower their stroke risk by adopting a healthy lifestyle.
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Love Island star Dr Brett Staniland announced as BHF’s Retail Ambassador
Sustainable fashion advocate, model and Love Island star, Dr Brett Staniland, has been announced as our Retail Ambassador, joining Coronation Street actress Kimberly Hart-Simpson.
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Queen's Speech prioritises the NHS, obesity and air pollution
We welcome Government plans to further invest in the NHS after Covid-19, tackle stubbornly high obesity levels, and clean up our dirty air.
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Nick Morrell
Professor Nick Morrell and his research team are investigating why lung blood vessels narrow in pulmonary hypertension, and how the narrowing might be prevented or reversed.
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Contact the Press Office
We're here for journalists with questions about heart and circulatory conditions and their risk factors, or the BHF generally, across the UK.