Institute for Molecular Cardiology – UofL News Mon, 20 Apr 2026 15:43:07 +0000 en-US hourly 1 NYU researcher will discuss heart’s conduction system at UofL /post/uofltoday/nyu-researcher-will-discuss-hearts-conduction-system-at-uofl/ /post/uofltoday/nyu-researcher-will-discuss-hearts-conduction-system-at-uofl/#respond Thu, 16 Mar 2017 19:35:02 +0000 http://uoflnews.com/?p=35819 An accomplished researcher from New York University will discuss the heart’s specialized conduction system in the next Leonard Leight Lecture at the University of Louisville.

Glenn I. Fishman, MD, will speak at noon, Wednesday, April 25, at the Jewish Rudd Heart & Lung Center Conference Center, 201 Abraham Flexner Way. Admission is free and parking also is available free of charge in the Jewish Hospital Garage, 450 S. Floyd St.

Fishman is the William Goldring Professor of Medicine and Director of the Leon H. Charney Division of Cardiology at New York University School of Medicine. He also serves as vice chair for Research in the Department of Medicine and a professor in the Department of Neuroscience and Physiology and the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Pharmacology.

His research focuses on the formation and function of the specialized cardiac conduction system. This complex network comprises pace-making cells that establish the normal rhythmicity of the heart, as well as rapidly conducting specialized cells that facilitate highly synchronized excitation and contraction of the working myocardium, which is the muscle substance of the heart that enables it to pump.

Continuing education credits are available to both physicians and nurses who attend the lecture and more information is available via email.

The Leonard Leight Lecture is presented annually by the  in the  at the University of Louisville School of Medicine and funding is provided through the Jewish Hospital & St. Mary’s Foundation. For 30 years until 1996, Leight was a practicing cardiologist in Louisville and played a major role in developing cardiology services and bringing innovative treatment modalities in heart disease to Louisville.

The Leonard Leight Lecture series was established at the Jewish Hospital & St. Mary’s Foundation in 1994 by gifts from Dr. and Mrs. Kurt Ackermann and Medical Center Cardiologists.

 

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Bolli research expanding to seven sites in five states /post/uofltoday/bolli-research-expanding-to-seven-sites-in-six-states/ /post/uofltoday/bolli-research-expanding-to-seven-sites-in-six-states/#respond Tue, 20 Dec 2016 20:41:45 +0000 http://uoflnews.com/?p=34541 The first researcher to successfully demonstrate the safety and potential efficacy of a type of adult cardiac stem cells in patients with heart failure will now oversee an expansion of his work at seven new sites in five states.

Roberto Bolli, MD, director of the University of Louisville Institute of Molecular Cardiology, announced today that a new research trial funded by NIH National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, the CONCERT-HF Study, is now open to enroll patients. The study is a Phase II, randomized, placebo-controlled trial of the safety, feasibility and efficacy of two types of adult stem cells used alone and in combination in patients with heart failure.

In addition to UofL, the study centers are Stanford University, the University of Miami, Indiana University, the Texas Heart Institute, the University of Florida and the Minneapolis Heart Institute Foundation. The School of Public Health at the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston will serve as the data coordinating center.

In the study, two types of stem cells will be studied. Both are known as “autologous” stem cells because they come from the same patient in whom they are returned. The two types of adult stem cells used are autologous mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) and c-kit+ cardiac stem cells (CSCs). MSCs will be manufactured from the patients’ own bone marrow while CSCs will be manufactured from the patients’ own heart tissue.

Bolli, who also serves as scientific director of the Cardiovascular Innovation Institute at UofL, is a pioneer in research using adult stem cells for cardiac disease. In the landmark 2011 SCIPIO trial, he and his research team were the first to successfully show the safety and potential efficacy of autologous c-kit+ stem cells taken via cardiac biopsy from patients who had suffered a previous heart attack.

SCIPIO enrolled 20 stem cell-treated patients with heart failure at UofL; four of the 20 patients discontinued the trial. Although definitive conclusions cannot be made because of the small number of patients, the results suggest a remarkable efficacy of autologous cardiac stem cells. After one year, the 16 patients in the study showed a 40 percent increase in the amount of blood their hearts were pumping. Moreover, MRIs in some patients showed significantly less dead heart tissue after the trial therapy, suggesting that the adult stem cell therapy was regenerative in nature.

Bolli practices with UofL Physicians. His success with the SCIPIO trial and his overall body of work, comprising more than 30 years of cardiac research, led to his successful grant application to establish a (CCTRN) center at UofL. This consortium of leading cardiovascular research organizations is sponsored by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute and conducts early clinical trials of adult stem cell therapies in patients with cardiovascular disease.

“I continue to believe that adult stem cells could be the greatest advancement in cardiovascular medicine in my lifetime,” Bolli said. “CONCERT-HF is very important because it will help determine whether c-kit cardiac stem cells are effective and whether combining two stem cell types is more effective than giving one cell type alone.”

 

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