Richard MacIsaac
St Vincent's Hospital, VIC, Australia
- This delegate is presenting an abstract at this event.
- Endocrinologist
Richard MacIsaac is professor and director of Endocrinology and Diabetes at St Vincent’s Hospital and the University of Melbourne. Prior to taking up his current position he was head of diabetes at Austin Health. His main research interest is diabetes and its complications, especially those related to cardiovascular and kidney disease. He has published over 170 research articles. Prior to embarking in a career in medicine, he completed a PhD at the Howard Florey Institute, Melbourne where he examined the development of the foetal hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis and then embarked on a 2-year post doctorial fellowship at St Vincent’s Institute of Medical Research, Melbourne examining foetal calcium metabolism. He graduated from the University of Melbourne’s Medical School in 1995 and was awarded his fellowship with the Royal Australasian College of Physicians in 2002. Currently specific research interests are inpatient glycaemic control, defining the albuminuria and glomerular filtration rate relationship in diabetes, investigating new biomarkers for renal and vascular disease in diabetes and studying renal function in indigenous Australians.
Presentations this author is a contributor to:
A Feasibility Study of a Novel Redundant Electrochemical Sensor for Continuous Glucose Monitoring in Patients With Type 1 Diabetes (Tid) (#44)
11:15 AM
Dilshani Jayawardene
ADS Clinical Orals: Type 1 Diabetes
Highly-sensitive Troponin T in a cohort of Indigenous Australian adults with and without Diabetes and Chronic Kidney Disease (#201)
10:15 AM
Hang D Nguyen
ADS Clinical Orals: Kidney Function in Diabetes
Urine protein fragment excretion in diabetic patients with chronic kidney disease (#327)
2:00 PM
Michele V Clarke
ADS Clinical Poster Viewing: Diabetic Complications
No evidence of reduced exercise capacity or ‘diabetic cardiomyopathy’ in type 1 diabetes subjects (#216)
12:30 PM
Timothy J Roberts
ADS Clinical Orals: Cardiac and Exercise