Agricultural innovation from scratch, entrepreneurship in the face of poverty, leading as a woman in traditional societies, and solving concrete problems on a local scale: this summer reading (.)
Tampa General Hospital (TGH) and USF Health Morsani College of Medicine Interventional Cardiologists reached multiple milestones this week in being the
Cardiol Therapeutics Inc.: Cardiol Therapeutics Announces Filing of 2020 Year-End Financial Statements and MD&A
Cardiol Therapeutics Inc. (
a clinical-stage biotechnology company
focused on developing innovative anti-inflammatory therapies for the treatment of cardiovascular disease, today filed its audited Financial Statements and Management s Discussion and Analysis for the year ended December 31, 2020. Both are available under the Company s profile on SEDAR at www.sedar.com and on the Company s website at www.cardiolrx.com.
David Elsley, President and Chief Executive Officer of Cardiol, commented: 2020 was a very exciting year for Cardiol Therapeutics. We made extraordinary progress in our research and clinical development programs, while significantly strengthening our financial position. We are particularly excited about the progress made across our research and development programs supporting the development of CardiolRx, our pharmaceutically produced extra-strength oral f
The effects of coronavirus on the heart aren’t fully known.
Along with all the other unknowns about the coronavirus is whether it has long-term effects on the heart.
Dr. Jeffrey Goldberger, a cardiologist and chief of cardiovascular medicine at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, says many COVID-19 survivors even those who experienced mild or no symptoms have ongoing heart inflammation as a result of their infections. Complications may include arrhythmia or heart failure.
“We don’t know for sure how this is going to heal. Everything about this virus is sort of new,” Goldberger says. “In five years, are we going to be seeing people who had COVID and now have some lingering scarring in their heart and are at risk for arrhythmia? It’s possible.”