Researchers from COR Group and of Corify Care SL have had an important participation at the prestigious Computing in Cardiology (CinC) 2024 conference, held in Karlsruhe (Germany) from September 8-11, 2024.
This annual event brings together global experts in cardiac health, computing, and medical innovation to explore the latest advancements in cardiology.
COR Group together with the Spin Off Corify Care SL presented a wide range of pioneering research contributions, with a particular focus on electrocardiographic imaging (ECGI).
«ECGI is an innovative, cutting-edge technology that can transform the way cardiac arrhythmias are diagnosed and treated. By offering a non-invasive method of mapping the heart’s electrical activity with high accuracy, ECGI provides detailed information about arrhythmias, allowing for more precise and personalised treatment plans”, said the Cor Group researchers.
This advance not only improves patient outcomes, but also minimises the need for invasive procedures, representing a major step forward in the field of cardiac electrophysiology.
“The potential of this research will make ECGI a standard tool in cardiology, improving the quality of life for patients with arrhythmias”, ITACA’s researchers highlighted.
The main contributions
Rubén Molero presented his research on «In-silico Framework for Estimation of Atrial Septal Ectopic Beats» and his talk on «Automatic Real-time Cardiac Mapping System for the Evaluation of Cardiac Resynchronization Therapy».
Jorge Sánchez explained the works «Constructing Ventricular Digital Twins From Multi-Modal Clinical Data at Large Scale» and «A Model Population-Based Approach to Enhance the Detection of Premature Ventricular Contraction using ECGI». Furthermore, he also presented a poster on non-Invasive Localization of Atrial Cardiomyopathy Using Body Surface Potential Maps and Graph Neural Networks
Andrea Cano and Clara Herrero, semifinalists in the prestigious Young Investigator Awards (YIA), explained in detail their cutting-edge work on non-invasive cardiac analysis using AI and ECGI, respectively. In addition, Jorge Vicente will be also presenting a poster on his work aboutPerformance of Iterative Methods of ECGI in the Atria.
Finally, Andreu M. Climent, Ramón y Cajal researcher at COR, participated in a roundtable titled «Beyond Academia: Career Paths for PhDs and Early-Stage Researchers in Industry».