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Professor Rachel Myles

University of Glasgow, Glasgow (United Kingdom of Great Britain & Northern Ireland)
Membership: EHRA Member
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Biography
Dr Rachel Myles is a Wellcome Trust Intermediate Fellow and Clinical Senior Lecturer at the University of Glasgow and Honorary Consultant Cardiologist at the Royal Infirmary in Glasgow. Rachel trained in Medicine at the University of Oxford and Kings College London. She completed a PhD in cardiac electrophysiology at the University of Glasgow in 2009 and a post-doctoral scholarship at University of California Davis in 2011. On her return to Glasgow Rachel was awarded a Wellcome Trust Intermediate Fellowship and started her own independent research group, becoming a Consultant in 2016. Rachel divides her time between her clinical practice in the management of heart rhythm disorders and her translational research into the electrophysiological mechanisms of ventricular arrhythmias.
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Contributor content

Still at sea: a patient’s ongoing journey with non-obstructive hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
Journal
Still at sea: a patient’s ongoing journey with non-obstructive hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
2 March 2026
Evidence for intermittent coupling of intramyocardial small, engineered heart tissues acutely implanted into rabbit myocardium
Journal
Evidence for intermittent coupling of intramyocardial small, engineered heart tissues acutely implanted into rabbit myocardium
28 February 2025
Initiation of ventricular arrhythmia in the acquired long QT syndrome
Journal
Initiation of ventricular arrhythmia in the acquired long QT syndrome
21 June 2022
Electrophysiological heterogeneity in large populations of rabbit ventricular cardiomyocytes
Journal
Electrophysiological heterogeneity in large populations of rabbit ventricular cardiomyocytes
10 January 2022
Is hypothermia more neuroprotective than avoiding fever after cardiac arrest?
Journal
Is hypothermia more neuroprotective than avoiding fever after cardiac arrest?
27 October 2021
Moderate but not severe hypothermia causes pro-arrhythmic changes in cardiac electrophysiology
Journal
Moderate but not severe hypothermia causes pro-arrhythmic changes in cardiac electrophysiology
7 February 2020

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