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Researchers on NotedSource with connections to Shinshu University include Benjamin Levine.

Benjamin Levine

Dallas, Texas, United States of America
Sports Cardiologist and consultant for the NCAA, NHL, NFL, USOC, USA Track and Field, and other athletic organizations.
Education

Brown University

B.A., Human Biology / May, 1978

Providence, Rhode Island, United States of America

Harvard University

M.D., Medicine / May, 1982

Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States of America

Stanford University

Internship & Residency, Internal Medicine / June, 1985

Stanford, California, United States of America

Shinshu University

Fellowship, Environmental Physiology / June, 1986

Matsumoto

Fellowship, Clinical Cardiology & Research Fellow, Cardiovascular/Exercise Physiology & Space Medicine / June, 1989

Dallas, Texas, United States of America
Research Expertise
Thirty plus years exploring the adaptive capacity of the circulation in response to exercise training, deconditioning, aging, and environmental stimuli such as spaceflight and high altitude.
Served as a co-investigator on 4 Spacelab missions (SLS-1, SLS-2, D-2 and Neurolab), the MIR space station, and most recently, awarded the 2021 Scientific Achievement award by the Aerospace Medicine Association a section of the Space Medicine Association.
Long, sustained track record of funding by the NIH, NASA and the NSBRI, for which he was the Team Leader of the Cardiovascular Section from 2007 to 2017 advising NASA’s flight surgeons on cardiovascular medical issues.
About
BENJAMIN D. LEVINE M.D. is the founder and Director of the Institute for Exercise and Environmental Medicine (IEEM) at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital Dallas where he also holds the S. Finley Ewing Chair for Wellness and the Harry S. Moss Heart Chair for Cardiovascular Research. He is Professor of Internal Medicine/Cardiology and Distinguished Professor of Exercise Sciences at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center.  Dr. Levine earned his B.A. magna cum laude in human biology from Brown University and his M.D. from Harvard Medical School.  He completed his internship and residency in internal medicine at Stanford University Medical Center followed by a cardiology fellowship at UT Southwestern where he trained under the renowned cardiovascular physiologists Gunnar Blomqivst, M.D. and Jere Mitchell, M.D.  Dr. Levine founded the IEEM in 1992 which has become one of the premier laboratories in the world for the study of human clinical and integrative physiology.  His global research interests center on the adaptive capacity of the circulation in response to exercise training, deconditioning, aging, and environmental stimuli such as spaceflight and high altitude.  A Henry Luce Foundation and Fulbright Scholar, he received the Peter van Handel Award from the US Olympic Committee (for outstanding research), the Research Award from the Wilderness Medical Society, the Honor Award from the Texas Chapter of ACSM, the Citation Award from the National ACSM for his body of work, and the Distinguished Scientist Award by the ACC.  A consummate clinician and teacher as well as a scholar, he was elected to the Association of University Cardiologists, received the Michael J. Joyner International Teaching Award from the Danish Cardiovascular Research Academy, and has been selected as one of the “Best Doctors” for cardiovascular medicine in Dallas and America by his peers.  Dr. Levine is a renowned sports cardiologist who sees athletes with cardiovascular medical problems from around the world and serves as a consultant to the NCAA, the NHL, the NFL, the USOC, USA Track and Field, and other athletic organizations. He has been a key contributor to the guidelines for the management of athletes with heart disease since 1994. Dr. Levine also has a unique background in space medicine, serving as a co-investigator on 4 Spacelab missions (SLS-1, SLS-2, D-2 and Neurolab), the MIR space station, and most recently, awarded the 2021 Scientific Achievement award by the Aerospace Medicine Association a section of the Space Medicine Association. He has a long, sustained track record of funding by the NIH, NASA and the National Space Biomedical Research Institute (NSBRI), for which he was the Team Leader of the Cardiovascular Section from 2007 to 2017 advising NASA’s flight surgeons on cardiovascular medical issues. His work with astronauts has translated into one of his other areas of clinical expertise, namely patients with syncope (fainting) and orthostatic intolerance (the inability to stand up and withstand the effects of gravity on Earth. Dr. Levine is currently the director of a Program Project grant that explores the “Mechanisms of Exercise Intolerance in Heart Failure with Preserved Ejection Fraction: Precision Therapy Based on Patient Specific Pathophysiology”. Dr. Levine has published 497 peer-reviewed journal articles, reviews, book chapters, and technical papers, and is currently serving on the editorial boards of numerous journals, Dr Levine is a fellow of the American Heart Association for which he is the immediate past chair of the Exercise and Cardiac Rehabilitation Committee, American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM), the Cardiovascular Section of the American Physiological Society and the American College of Cardiology, former VP and member Board of Trustees of ACSM, a member of the Board of Directors of the American Autonomic Society, elected member of the Association of University Cardiologists, and elected member of the prestigious medical society the Association of American Physicians.

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