Cardiac Oriented Research Group - COR
News
News
Eloína Coll, Zoe Valero, Gemma Lucas and Ángela González, researchers from ITACA, who represent different stages of a scientific career, discuss their personal views on scientific careers.
The HELIOS project is coordinated by María Guillem and aims to improve the diagnosis and treatment of atrial fibrillation, contributing to better health outcomes and more equitable access to advanced cardiac simulation tools.
For the first time, the heart can be seen non-invasively exactly as it behaves during an arrhythmia, facilitating medical intervention. The work has been published in Nature Communications Medicine.
In the EFICACIA project, led by Dr María S. Guillem from the COR group at ITACA, has been developed a non-invasive tool capable of estimating whether a patient’s heart shows signs of fibrosis (damaged tissue) or abnormal electrical activity
María Guillem received the Knowledge Transfer Award for the impact of ACORYS, the non-invasive cardiac mapping technology. Eduardo Rojas, ICT vs CC group, received a special mention for his scientific work on DANA.
The group showcases innovative solutions based on artificial intelligence and bioelectromagnetism in Brazil and Brussels to advance the detection and treatment of cardiac arrhythmias.
Researchers from the COR-ITACA group have developed a new technique that improves the diagnosis of cardiac arrhythmias and reduces detection errors by up to 80%.
The award recognized her work on the development of DIGICOR, an interactive platform to improve personalized ablation planning for patients with Atrial Fibrillation (AF), one of the most common and complex cardiac arrhythmias.
The Proton-ECGI project has been led by Dr. Andreu Climent and it consolidates a new line of research within the COR group, focused on the intersection of cardiac electrophysiology, non-invasive imaging, and radiotherapy technologies

