Int J Angiol 1992; 1(2): 49-54
DOI: 10.1007/BF02651515
Editorial Review

© Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York

Highlights in cardiology

F. Kaindl
  • Department of Internal Medicine II, Cardiology Division, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria
Further Information

Publication History

Publication Date:
22 April 2011 (online)

Abstract

Any appraisal of today's highlights in cardiology must look back on pioneering achievements in the past. The history of this important discipline of internal medicine shows us that the most important steps in its development were temporarily very distant from each other. As early as 1622 William Harvey for the first time described the blood circulation; in 1733 Steven Hales reported on his experiment of blood pressure measurement, but it was not before 1895 that the pediatrician Scipione Riva-Rocci presented his technique for bloodless registration of the systolic and diastolic blood pressure. This method—named after him—was corroborated by the work of the Russian physiologist N. S. Korotkow in 1905. In 1903 Willem Einthoven recorded electrical currents in the heart, and 1910 was the year of birth of clinical electrocardiography introduced by Sir Thomas Lewis.