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Dr. Mariia Koteliukh

Dr. Mariia Koteliukh

PhD and postdoctoral researcher at the Department of Academician L.T. Malaya Department of Internal Medicine No. 2, Clinical Immunology and Allergology

Postdoc

Kharkiv National Medical University

CV: Mariia Koteliukh is a PhD and postdoctoral researcher at the Academician L.T. Malaya Department of Internal Medicine No. 2, Clinical Immunology and Allergology Department of the Kharkiv National Medical University. Since September 2020 until the present time she has been working on the dissertation ""Clinical and pathogenetic substantiation of diagnosis and treatment of acute myocardial infarction in patients with obesity and type 2 diabetes mellitus"". From 2012 until today, she has been working in Hospital No. 27, Kharkiv, Ukraine, as a therapist. She has got a pedagogical experience in practical classes of Internal medicine and has published more than 20 scientific papers included in Scopus and Web of Science, 40 theses of reports at international conferences and 2 patents.

Presenting about:

Cardiovascular diseases in Ukraine in the conditions of hostilities and their consequences: prospects for scientific research

Abstract: Abstract. Currently, intense fighting is occurring in Kharkiv and the Kharkiv region of Ukraine caused by Russian military aggression. Not only military but also civilians are bearing the brunt, including patients with chronic cardiovascular disease. The most important thing is that planned inpatient treatment is not available for such patients, so they are experiencing chronic stress and negative emotions, fears and worries about their own lives and the lives of loved ones, resulting in additional psychological and physical pressure and moral conflicts. The study ""Clinical and pathogenetic substantiation of diagnosis and treatment of acute myocardial infarction (MI) in patients with obesity and type 2 diabetes mellitus (DM)"" was conducted in peacetime, but today it has become most relevant in hospital practice. Prospects for the study presented in the postwar period will reveal the consequences of additional weakened state of patients with previous MI in the presence or absence of type 2 DM and obesity, model treatment and rehabilitation therapy as well as psychological support of patients.