This Grand Round, presented by Dr Ranil de Silva, focuses on ‘Coronary sinus reducer for the treatment of angina and coronary microvascular dysfunction’.
Dr Ranil de Silva Background
Dr Ranil de Silva is a consultant interventional cardiologist and leads the specialist angina service at Royal Brompton Hospital, where he treats private and NHS patients.
In 1995, he graduated with honours from King’s College London with a degree in medicine. Following that he completed his training in general medicine, general cardiology and interventional cardiology at Royal Brompton, Chelsea and Westminster, Hammersmith, and St Mary’s hospitals in London.
He conducted his PhD research at the Medical Research Council Cyclotron Unit, Hammersmith Hospital, London, and at the Research Institute for Brain and Blood Vessels in Akita, Japan.
In particular, his research areas include: refractory angina, coronary microvascular dysfunction, coronary plaque biomechanics, novel cardiac magnetic resonance imaging techniques for the study of adverse left ventricular remodelling.
Focusing on all aspects of general cardiology and how to manage patients and when to refer.
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Dr Sohaib Nazir Background
Dr Sohaib Nazir is a consultant cardiologist at Royal Brompton Hospital and clinical senior lecturer at King’s College London. Dr Nazir specialises in all aspects of general adult cardiology such as chest pain, breathlessness, palpitations, and general health checks for cardiovascular risk factor modification.
He has a specialist interest in heart failure and cardio-oncology – notably he is one of the few clinicians in the UK who are accredited by the International Cardio-Oncology Society, and the Royal Brompton Hospital is one of two centres in the UK with Gold accreditation by this society.
Focusing on prevention approaches in COPD (including inhaled and non-inhaled advanced therapies, use of eosinophil biomarkers etc), approaches to distinguishing viral from bacterial infections (with associated implications for antibiotic stewardship) and an update on current understanding and approaches to managing long COVID syndromes.
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Dr Aran Singanayagam Background
Dr Aran Singanayagam completed his medical training at the University of Edinburgh in 2005 achieving distinction in his final examinations alongside a first-class intercalated BSc in physiology. He trained as a respiratory doctor within north-west London, primarily at St Mary’s, Royal Brompton and Harefield hospitals.
This Grand Round presented by Dr Guy Scadding explores penicillin allergy de-labelling.
This Grand Round presented by Professor Nizar N. JarJour focuses on the systematic effect of asthma.
Professor Nizar N. JarJour Background
Nizar Jarjour, MD is an Adult Pulmonologist, Ovid Meyer Endowed Professor of Medicine, and the Head of the Division of Allergy, Pulmonary & Critical Care Medicine in the Department of Medicine.
Dr. Jarjour has served as a Principal Investigator for several NIH funded collaborative grants, including the severe asthma research program (SARP) and the precision therapies in severe and exacerbation prone asthma (PrecISE). Most recently, Dr. Jarjour has conducted research studies on the systemic effects of asthma. In 2023, Drs. Jarjour and Melissa Rosenkranz received an RO1 as Co-PIs to study the effects of airway inflammation in asthma on the risk for dementia. Last September, he chaired the International Collaborative Asthma Network (ICAN) meeting in Milan and started a 6-month sabbatical in the UK to explore opportunities for US-UK collaboration on asthma research studies. The first half of his sabbatical was spent at University of Southampton, and he came to Imperial College in late November for the second half of his sabbatical, working closely with Drs. Fan Chung, Salman Siddiqui and Ian Adcock.
This talk presented by Dr Owais Dar focuses on heart transplantation and LVAD therapy and analysis where we are now and how we got here.
Dr Owais Dar Background
Dr Dar completed his specialist general cardiology training and sub-speciality heart failure training at:
He got a funded international fellowship in advanced heart failure, heart transplantation and left ventricular assist devices in Vienna General Hospital (Austria) and Stanford Health Care (California, USA).
This talk focuses on lung cancer screening tools, investigations and monitoring within primary care, as well as new approaches to lung nodules, including robotic bronchoscopy.
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Dr Christopher Orton Background
Dr Christopher Orton graduated from St George’s Hospital Medical School with MBBS and a BSc in Biochemistry and Immunology. After completing his general medical and respiratory specialty training in London, he has worked at prestigious teaching hospitals, including Hammersmith Hospital, St Mary’s Hospital, St George’s Hospital, and the Royal Brompton Hospital. Moreover, dr Orton has completed a PhD with Imperial College London on the effects of epithelial resurfacing with liquid nitrogen using Metered Cryospray in patients with COPD. Dr Orton’s NHS base is the Royal Brompton Hospital, where he is a member of the lung cancer, and interventional bronchoscopy unit.
Professor Michael Polkey, Interim Director of Research and Care Group Chair for Lung Failure, Royal Brompton Hospital.
With the second longest commute in the NHS, Professor Poley works for 8 weeks per year in the NHS Highland where he provides respiratory services to Lochaber, Skye and Points West.
Professor Michael Polkey Background
Professor Michael Polkey is an academic and continues as a professor of respiratory medicine at Imperial College London.
Professor Polkey specialises in many respiratory conditions, including: chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), respiratory aspects of neurological disease, advanced lung disease which results in respiratory failure, sleep disordered breathing, emphysema, diaphragm disease.
In particular, he is an expert in the management of chronic respiratory failure, treating COPD, weaning patients from invasive mechanical ventilation and is highly considered for his expertise in neurological diseases as motor neurone disease (MND) known as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and Lou Gehrig’s disease.
Focusing on how to diagnose chronic cough in children and decide who needs investigations within primary care.
Dr Ian Balfou-Lynn Background
Dr Ian Balfour-Lynn is a consultant in paediatric respiratory medicine at Royal Brompton and Harefield hospitals.
Dr Ian Balfour-Lynn specialises in all aspects of paediatric respiratory medicine and performs all complex investigations including flexible bronchoscopy as a diagnostic tool. He is a specialist in severe infant wheezing, severe asthma, cystic fibrosis and recurrent chest infections.
Jens Spiesshoefer, MD, PhD, Assistant Professor (Privatdozent) of Respiratory Medicine and Binaya Regmi, MD: Jens graduated from medical school in 2016 with his MD thesis on sleep disordered breathing (group Professor Olaf Oldenburg) and completed a PhD program in translational medicine at Scuola Superiore Sant’ Anna Pisa from 2019-2022 (group Professor Alberto Giannoni).
Since 2021 and together with Binaya Regmi who defended his MD on diaphragm dysfunction in Long Covid in 2023 their now RWTH Aachen University Hospital (Department Prof Michael Dreher) based own labs and groups translational research focuses mainly on diaphragm dysfunction and its clinical consequences. This comprises invasive gold standard techniques to determine respiratory muscle activity as well as sympathetic nerve activity.
This talk will focus on the analysis of audit data and how and where clinical data gets used.Â
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This talk by Mr Espeed Khoshbin focuses on on managing post cardiac surgical patients in the primary care setting.
Focusing on the role of primary care physicians in managing post operative complications and secondary prevention after coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG), with reference to antiplatelet agents and lipid-lowering medications. Management of hypertension, diabetes mellitus, smoking cessation, weight loss, and cardiac rehabilitation.
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Mr Espeed Khoshbin Background
Mr Espeed Khoshbin is a consultant in cardiac surgery transplantation and mechanical circulatory support at Royal Brompton and Harefield hospitals. He is also an honorary clinical senior lecturer at Imperial College and The National Heart and Lung Institute (NHLI) in London. He is the national lead for heart and lung transplant education, local lead for cardiac surgical training and an examiner for the board of examiners of the European and UK cardiac surgery.Mr Khoshbin is the NHS lead for organ utilisation at Royal Brompton and Harefield Hospitals.
This talk by professor Mona Bafadhel focuses on eosinophilis in COPD as a major healthcare burden and cause of mortality worldwide.
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Professor Mona Bafadhel Background
Mona Bafadhel holds the positions of Chair in Respiratory Medicine at King’s College London and Director of the recently established King’s Centre for Lung Health. Additionally, she works as a consultant respiratory physician at the Guy’s and St. Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust. Her areas of interest in both clinical and research are asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). With a strong desire to use clinical research to better patient outcomes, Mona is a leading international academic in the field of respiratory medicine. Her research on COVID-19 and COPD has changed therapeutic practices that impact millions of people worldwide. The Royal College of Physicians bestowed to Mona the Goulstonian Lectureship in 2018 in recognition of her achievements in the clinical sciences. She is the first woman from an ethnic minority and just the fourth overall.