Chen Ying-Fu

Kaohsiung Medical University Taiwan

Dr. Ying-Fu Chen was born in Changhua, Taiwan, in 1946. He received an MD degree from Kaohsiung Medical College, Kaohsiung, Taiwan, in 1973, and a PhD degree from Graduate Institute of Medicine, Kaohsiung Medical University, in 1992. In 1983, Dr. Chen was a clinical fellow at the Heart Institute of Japan, Tokyo Women Medical University in 1983, before moving to Durham, North Carolina in 1985, where he worked as a research fellow at the Duke University Medical Center. He was appointed Professor of Surgery at the Kaohsiung Medical University in 1992, and is currently appointed Professor of Graduate Institute of Medicine as well, also at the Kaohsiung Medical University. His main research interests include stem cells and inflammation in basic studies, and thoracic aorta aneurysms/dissections in clinical fields. He has served as an editor of 2 books and is also an editorial member of several national and international journals. Currently, he also serves as a managing editor of Frontiers of Bioscience.

Chen Ying-Fu

1books edited

1chapters authored

Latest work with IntechOpen by Chen Ying-Fu

Much has evolved in the field of aortic valve disease because of the increase in knowledge in the last decade, especially in the area of its management. This book "Aortic Valve" is comprised of 18 chapters covering basic science, general consideration of aortic valve disease, infective endocarditis, aortic sclerosis and aortic stenosis, bioprosthetic valve, transcatheter aortic valve implantation and a special section on congenital anomalies of the aortic valve. We hope this book will be particularly useful to cardiologists and cardiovascular surgeons and trainees. We also believe that this book will be a valuable resource for radiologists, pathologists, cardiovascular anesthesiologists, and other healthcare professionals who have a special interest in treating patients with aortic valve disease. We are certain that information in this book will help to provide virtually most new areas of aortic valve disease that will be employed in the current era.

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