Speaker illustration

Doctor Bram Jacobus Bernardus Ruijsink

King's College London, London (United Kingdom of Great Britain & Northern Ireland)

Member of:

European Society of Cardiology

Dr Bram Ruijsink is a cardiologist in training and translational researcher in the field of biomedical engineering. His research focusses on translating technical innovations in the field of artificial intelligence and computational modelling to clinical care. He combines a clinical role at University Medical Center Utrecht, the Netherlands, with a research position at the department of biomedical engineering at King's College London, United Kingdom. His strong skillset in clinical medicine as well as biomedical engineering, obtained during a PhD in biomedical engineering at King's College London, allows him to bridge the gap between the two fields and effectively translate new technologies to clinical care.

Left ventricular myocardial tissue characteristics and function among healthy subjects with varying atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease risk

Event: ESC Congress 2022

Topic: Systolic and Diastolic Function

Session: Cardiac magnetic resonance - Deformation imaging

Thumbnail

Automated non-invasive pressure-volume loop analysis of cardiac aging in a large cohort of healthy community dwellers

Event: ESC Congress 2021 - The Digital Experience

Topic: Systolic and Diastolic Function

Session: Imaging heart failure with preserved ejection fraction

Thumbnail

Selective Heart Rate inhibition improves inadequate exercise response in Fontan Circulation

Event: ESC Congress 2018

Topic: Pathophysiology and Mechanisms

Session: Drug therapy in congenital heart disease - What are the options and the needs?

Thumbnail

Fully automated assessment of filling and ejection rates of the ventricle. Reference values for healthy volunteers from the UK-biobank cohort.

Event: ESC Congress 2018

Topic: Systolic and Diastolic Function

Session: CMR innovation for clinical use

Thumbnail

ESC 365 is supported by

logo Novo Nordisk
logo Bristol Myers Squibb