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  • Digital transformation within a clinical pathway

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  • RESEARCH

    The role of stem cells in preventing diabetes-related cardiovascular disease

    University of Leeds | Dr Richard Cubbon

    Dr Richard Cubbon, a BHF Intermediate Clinical Research Fellow, at the University of Leeds, has been awarded a grant totalling nearly £170,000 to allow his team to investigate the link between diabetes and cardiovascular disease. They will...

  • RESEARCH

    Working out how blood flow disturbances predispose to atherosclerosis

    University of Sheffield | Dr Heather Wilson

    Heart attacks and strokes result from the build-up of fatty plaques within blood vessels, called atherosclerosis. There are specific regions of arteries, such as branch points and curves, that more likely to develop fatty plaques. This is b...

  • RESEARCH

    Working out how VEGFR1 regulates blood vessel growth

    University of Bristol | Professor Harry Mellor

    The study of angiogenesis – the growth of new blood vessels – is an important area of research in heart and circulatory disease. One of the key molecules that drives angiogenesis is called VEGF-A. It acts via another molecule on the surface...

  • RESEARCH

    How platelet stickiness is regulated

    University of Bristol | Professor Stuart Mundell

    A heart attack occurs when thrombosis (a blood clot) develops inside the blood vessels supplying the heart. Platelets, the main blood cell involved in thrombosis, can be switched on to become sticky by various mediator molecules. Thromboxan...

  • RESEARCH

    Modelling inflammation in the build-up of arterial plaques

    Imperial College London | Professor James Moore

    Professor James Moore is supervising a PhD student looking at the role of inflammation in atherosclerosis, the build-up of fatty deposits in arteries. Most fatty deposits (called plaques) have inflammation as a hallmark, and all inflammati...

  • RESEARCH

    Slowing the progression of atherosclerosis in people with diabetes

    University of Aberdeen | Professor Mirela Delibegovic

    In people with diabetes, heart and circulatory disease causes a significant number of deaths. This is because atherosclerosis (where the large blood vessels in our bodies ‘fur up’ with fatty deposits) progresses faster in people with diabet...

  • RESEARCH

    Hijacking immune checkpoints to prevent the build-up of fatty plaques

    University of Oxford | Professor Claudia Monaco

    White blood cells involved in inflammation play a key role in the development of fatty plaques that form in our arteries (atherosclerosis). Some white blood cells, called macrophages and monocytes, are controlled by many checkpoints to reg...

  • RESEARCH

    How do genetic faults cause lymphoedema?

    St George's, University of London | Dr Pia Ostergaard

    Supervised by Dr Pia Ostergaard, this PhD student is studying how genetic faults can lead to primary lymphoedema, a lifelong, often disabling condition affecting the lymphatic system. The lymphatic system is a network of vessels that car...