BOSTON, MA — Early evidence supporting a new transcatheter leadless pacemaker—one the size of a large vitamin implanted into the apex of the right ventricle—was presented yesterday at the Heart Rhythm ...
(HealthDay)—The world's smallest pacemaker is safe and effective in patients with symptomatic bradycardia, according to the first human clinical trial of the device. The findings were scheduled to be ...
A new innovative miniaturized pacemaker, developed in part by a Calgary cardiologist, has been given approval for use on patients beyond the clinical research stage. The Foothills Medical Centre in ...
(HealthDay News) — The world’s smallest pacemaker is safe and effective in patients with symptomatic bradycardia, according to the first human clinical trial of the device. The findings were presented ...
St. Jude Medical’s $123.5 million acquisition of a miniaturized pacemaker developer marks the med-tech company’s first foray into the wireless pacemaker market. The St. Paul-based company said Monday ...
Please provide your email address to receive an email when new articles are posted on . The first pacemaker implantation was performed in 1958, and the technology has undergone many advances since ...
Researchers at Texas Heart Institute (THI) and UCLA crossed a significant milestone in the development of wirelessly powered, leadless pacemakers. In an article in the Nature Research journal ...
(HealthDay News) — The world’s smallest pacemaker is safe and effective in patients with symptomatic bradycardia, according to the first human clinical trial of the device. The findings were scheduled ...
CALGARY — A new innovative miniaturized pacemaker, developed in part by a Calgary cardiologist, has been given approval for use on patients beyond the clinical research stage. The Foothills Medical ...
The Foothills Medical Centre is seen on Wednesday, April 1, 2020. The Calgary hospital is also to become a training centre for physicians to provide future patients with a new miniaturized pacemaker.
CALGARY - Gord Kirk knew that he needed a pacemaker. The Calgarian said his heart would slow down to about 30 beats a minute, he could feel the time between each beat, and he would often grow faint if ...