Eugene Braunwald, 'Father of Modern Cardiology,' Dies at 96; One Vision Realized, Another Endures
Eugene Braunwald, the pioneering cardiologist whose work reshaped global heart disease treatment, died on April 22 at the age of 96. His death marks the end of an era for cardiovascular medicine, yet one of his two major career dreams remains unfulfilled.
Braunwald, widely hailed as the father of modern cardiology, achieved his first dream: translating basic research into practical methods to prevent heart attacks and limit muscle damage once an attack begins. That accomplishment redefined emergency cardiac care and saved countless lives.
Two Visions, One Realized
In numerous conversations, Braunwald confided that he harbored two grand ambitions. The first—to bridge the gap between theory and bedside practice—succeeded spectacularly. The second, which he did not live to see fulfilled, remains a guiding goal for the field.

According to a close colleague who spoke with him extensively, Braunwald once said: My first dream was to prove that we could prevent heart attacks and salvage damaged heart muscle. That dream came true. The second—I hope the next generation will finish it.
Background: A Legacy of Innovation
Born in 1929, Braunwald earned his medical degree from New York University and later joined the National Institutes of Health. There he initiated landmark studies on myocardial infarction, coronary artery disease, and the role of the sympathetic nervous system.

Over six decades, he published more than 1,000 scientific papers and mentored dozens of future leaders in cardiology. His textbook Heart Disease remains a standard reference worldwide.
Braunwald also led the development of thrombolytic therapy and beta-blockers, treatments that dramatically improved outcomes for heart attack patients. His work fundamentally changed how physicians approach acute coronary syndromes.
What This Means
Braunwald's death closes an illustrious chapter, but his unfinished dream highlights the persistent gap in cardiovascular research: achieving complete and lasting prevention of heart disease. While his first dream revolutionized acute care, the second—likely a cure or near‑eradication of atherosclerosis—remains elusive.
Young cardiologists now inherit that challenge. Braunwald's example proves that bold, evidence‑driven research can change medicine. His final, unrealized goal may well inspire the next breakthrough.
As one former trainee put it: He taught us that we should never stop dreaming. That second dream is now our responsibility.
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