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Pulmonary hypertension in the developing world: Local registries, challenges, and ways to move forward
Author(s) -
Majdy Idrees,
Ghazwan Butrous,
Ana Mocunbi,
B.K.S. Sastry,
Ahmed S. Ibrahim,
Khalid Alobaidallah,
Ahmed Hassan,
Ayman AH Farghaly,
Magdi H. Yacoub
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
global cardiology science and practice
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2305-7823
DOI - 10.21542/gcsp.2020.14
Subject(s) - medicine , pulmonary hypertension , intensive care medicine , developing country , psychological intervention , pulmonary disease , disease , economic growth , pathology , cardiology , economics , psychiatry
Pulmonary hypertension (PH) is a disease that can only be appropriately managed in the ‘rich’ developed countries, as both diagnostic and therapeutic interventions are extremely expensive and expectations for these to be adopted by the developing, economically-challenged countries are neither practical nor realistic. Furthermore, most of the enormous advances in understanding the pathobiology of PH and the subsequent evidence-based diagnostic and complex treatment algorithms came from the developed world.

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