Massachusetts General Hospital Breaks Ground on State-of-the-Art Clinical Care Building
Facility along Cambridge Street will provide exceptional care, increased capacity and strengthen ties to West End and Beacon Hill neighborhoods.
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Corrigan Minehan Heart Center
Contact Information
Nathan Sciortino, M.A.
Director of Operations
Cardiovascular Imaging Core Lab
Massachusetts General Hospital Imaging
25 New Chardon Street, Suite 400B
Boston,
MA
02114
Phone: 617-643-5308
Fax: 617-643-0111
Email: nsciortino@partners.org
The Cardiovascular Imaging Core Lab at Massachusetts General Hospital is an independent facility dedicated to providing the highest quality services to the cardiovascular imaging community. We operate as a professional, compartmented PACS/RIS/data management facility capable of handling administrative and scientific aspects of large multicenter trials compliant with FDA/NIH regulations, and can provide qualitative and quantitative analysis of cardiovascular imaging data sets.
Learn more about us by visiting our website.
The Cardiovascular Imaging Core Lab at Massachusetts General Hospital can provide assistance with all phases of design and application of clinical trials and is equipped to manage storage and analysis of large, complex datasets. In addition, we have expert readers able to perform complex analysis on various dataset types using workstations and software from all major vendors.
Facility along Cambridge Street will provide exceptional care, increased capacity and strengthen ties to West End and Beacon Hill neighborhoods.
The wrist-worn devices may identify patients who would benefit from stroke prevention therapies.
On May 24, 2022, the Massachusetts General Hospital Transplant Center held a virtual, fireside chat to share the latest updates on COVID-19 and transplantation.
Women who had experienced infertility had a 16% increased risk of heart failure compared with women who did not have an infertility history.
Advanced consumer technology has produced small electrocardiogram devices that could be efficiently deployed in point-of-care screening for atrial fibrillation, though the proportion of cases detected among all patients 65 and older is small.
Mutations in genes that direct the production of fibrillar collagens, essential components of blood vessel walls, appear to predispose individuals to SCAD.
Learn more about our research.