NUI Galway Professor Awarded European Society of Cardiology Gold Medal Award

Pictured right, Professor William Wijns, NUI Galway receives his Gold Medal Award from Professor Jeroen Bax, President of the European Society of Cardiology in Barcelona. Photo: European Society of Cardiology
Sep 07 2017 Posted: 10:14 IST

Professor William Wijns, a Professor in Interventional Cardiology at the Lambe Institute for Translational Research in NUI Galway, has been honoured with a Gold Medal Award from the European Society of Cardiology in Barcelona, in recognition for his outstanding achievements and international reputation as a leading cardiologist.

Professor Wijns joined NUI Galway last October as part of a Science Foundation Ireland Research Professorship Programme, which supports national strategic priorities by recruiting world-leading research and leadership talent to Ireland.

This particular programme of work will focus on interventional cardiology and early evaluation of new device-based therapies. More specifically, Professor Wijns’ research focuses on preventing heart attacks and sudden death caused by unexpected blockage of arteries supplying the heart with blood and oxygen. This occurs in people exposed to risk factors such as family history, hypertension, smoking, diabetes or high cholesterol, who exhibit a vulnerable narrowing in the walls of their arteries, without being aware of it.

At NUI Galway, Professor Wijns is currently spearheading a €5 million research project that uses wearable or implantable sensors to alert patients at high risk of heart attacks to triggers such as stress or high blood pressure. Pilot patient clinical trials are currently underway at the Cardiology Department at Saolta University Healthcare group, where Professor Wijns will collaborate with other clinicians engaged in translational cardiovascular research.

Trigger mechanisms like anger, mental stress, high blood pressure, strenuous exercise and sleep disorders cause the narrowing to rupture inside the conduit, obstructing the artery. Professor Wijns work will look at developing medical devices that can monitor these ‘trigger’ activities electronically, at a distance, using sensors in high-risk subjects who are known to carry this vulnerable narrowing of the artery, and in doing so, anticipate and potentially prevent heart attacks. 

Commenting on receiving his award, Professor William Wijns said: “I am extremely honoured to be awarded this prestigious award from the European Society of Cardiology, especially at the moment as the interventional community is celebrating 40 years of coronary dilatation and 15 years of percutaneous aortic valve replacement. I am also very thankful to Science Foundation Ireland for enabling me to continue my scientific journey by contributing to the development and evaluation of new device-based therapies, in the stimulating environment of NUI Galway’s Lambe Institute for Translational Medicine and CÚRAM, right at the centre of the Irish innovation-friendly ecosystem.”

In recent years Professor Wijns has held board memberships in the European Society of Cardiology and the World Heart Federation. He is currently Chairman of PCR, co-Director of AfricaPCR and EuroPCR, the official congress of the European Association of Percutaneous Cardiovascular Interventions.

Professor Wijns previously worked at the Thorax Center in Rotterdam, where he was actively involved with the first applications of nuclear cardiology, thrombolysis and coronary dilatation, at the University of Louvain in Brussels, where he was Clinical Professor of Cardiology and as co-Director at the Cardiovascular Research Center Aalst in Belgium.

To watch Professor William Wijns receive his Gold Medal Award, visit: https://youtu.be/7X7eGxMxiUc?t=52m24s. Video courtesey of the European Society of Cardiology.

-Ends-

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