[HTML][HTML] Cardiovascular medicine at the turn of the millennium: triumphs, concerns, and opportunities

E Braunwald - New England Journal of Medicine, 1997 - Mass Medical Soc
E Braunwald
New England Journal of Medicine, 1997Mass Medical Soc
Tthe end of every century it is customary to reflect on the events of the past hundred years
and to look toward the future, and in this lecture I should like to do this for cardiovascular
disease. This is also an especially opportune time to comment on progress in cardiovascular
disease, because both the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute and the American Heart
Association are celebrating their golden anniversaries within the next 18 months. These two
organizations have had the most profound influence on the development of research on …
Tthe end of every century it is customary to reflect on the events of the past hundred years and to look toward the future, and in this lecture I should like to do this for cardiovascular disease. This is also an especially opportune time to comment on progress in cardiovascular disease, because both the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute and the American Heart Association are celebrating their golden anniversaries within the next 18 months. These two organizations have had the most profound influence on the development of research on cardiovascular disease during the 20th century.
A bewildering amount of . . .
The New England Journal Of Medicine