Here’s what I can provide right now: I don’t have access to live, comprehensive “latest news” feeds in this chat turn, so I can’t reliably list the newest headlines from May 2026 onward. However, I can share a couple of recent-reported research items related to angina pectoris that I was able to surface.
Recent research headlines (angina pectoris–related)
-
AI + microRNA approach for unstable angina diagnosis (emergency setting): Researchers at the German Centre for Cardiovascular Research (DZHK), reported via a 2020 news release, described an approach combining neural networks with specific RNA molecules (microRNAs) to help diagnose unstable angina pectoris earlier and more reliably in patients who present with chest pain.[2]
-
Epidemiology outlook / burden trends: A 2020 report write-up (citing GlobalData) projected that diagnosed prevalent cases of angina pectoris could rise from 19.58 million (2018) to 22.79 million (2028) across major markets, with increasing age and several cardiovascular risk factors cited as drivers (e.g., smoking, diabetes, hypercholesterolemia, systemic hypertension).[1]
If you want truly “latest” news
Tell me your preferred scope and I’ll tailor the search:
- Time window: past week / month / 3 months?
- Type: clinical trials, drug updates, guidelines, or general medical news?
- Region/language: UK/EU/global (and English only, or French too)?
Once you confirm, I can compile a focused, up-to-date shortlist with sources.
Sources
The diagnosed prevalent cases of angina pectoris is expected to increase from 19.58 million cases in 2018 to 22.79 million cases in 2028, at an annual growth rate (AGR) of 1.64% across the seven major markets 7MM, according to GlobalData, a leading data and analytics company.
www.news-medical.netThe Angina Pectoris, based in Stuttgart-Germany are back with their latest album “Seven Year Itch”. An exclusive comeback show at WGT in Leipzig, largest Gothic festival on this planet and Castle Part
soundcloud.comA new international study identifies eight different causes of chest pain despite normal coronary arteries.
dzhk.deMedical and health news service that features the most comprehensive coverage in the fields of neuroscience, cardiology, cancer, HIV/AIDS, psychology, psychiatry, dentistry, genetics, diseases and conditions, medications and more.
medicalxpress.comWhen patients are admitted to the hospital with chest pain, it is crucial to determine as quickly as possible whether or not a heart attack has occurred. By combining artificial intelligence and RNA molecules, scientists at the German Centre for Cardiovascular Research (DZHK) have developed a method by which unstable angina pectoris, a condition that can result in myocardial infarction, could in future be detected earlier and more reliably.
dzhk.deHeart disease is the world's number one killer but very few people know life-saving treatment such as CPR.
en.as.com