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Carl Tong, MD-PhD, FACC

Medical Director, Heart Failure - Bannner University Medical Center - Tucson
Clinical Professor, Medicine
Professor, Cellular and Molecular Medicine

Carl Tong, MD-PhD, took an unusual path to pursue his passion for caring for heart failure patients as a physician-scientist. The United States Air Force provided education in bachelor's and master's degrees in electrical engineering. Experiences in the First Gulf War and a short-term summer mission to Honduras caused him to change his career. The GI Bill and the Texas Hazelwood Act supported the completion of a combined MD-PhD. Seeing a heart failure patient suffer caused him to pursue cardiology and cardiovascular research. His extended cardiology fellowship at Wisconsin included cardiovascular disease, NIH-T32 research, and advanced heart failure/transplant cardiology.

As a physician and medical director, he helped to rescue a new heart transplant program and start a new left ventricular assist device program in Texas. As an associate professor and course director in Texas, he implemented active teaching encompassing hands-on/ears-on learning with robotic simulators, computer simulation of the cardiovascular system, and hands-on introduction to bedside echocardiogram. As a scientist, he elucidated fundamental mechanisms that govern heart function (cross-bridge cooperative activation/de-activation modulates heart function independent of calcium) and developed new methods (using surface plasmon resonance to measure cross-bridge attachment/detachment within intact sarcomeres, simultaneous measurements of intracardiac pressure and intracellular calcium on intact beating mouse hearts, a breath analyzer that measures cardiac output).

Dr. Tong continues a passionate pursuit of finding better ways to treat heart failure patients as a physician-scientist, including left ventricular assist device heart recovery, non-invasive monitoring devices, and the development of new myofilament-based approaches.

Degrees

  • University of Wisconsin: Fellowship that included cardiovascular diseases, NIH-T32 research, and Advanced Heart Failure/Transplant Cardiology 2010
  • Duke University Medical Center: Internal Medicine Residency 2005
  • Texas A&M University: Combined Doctorates in Medicine and Philosophy (MD-PhD) 2002
  • United States Air Force Institute of Technology: Master of Science in Electrical Engineering (MSEE) 1987
  • Texas A&M University: Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering (BSEE) 1985

Awards

  • Undergraduate: Tau Beta Pi, Etta Kapp Nu, Phi Kappa Phi, cum Laude
  • United States Air Force: Achievement Medal (1990), Commendation Medal (1991), Commendation Medal First Oak Leaf Cluster (1992).
  • MD-PhD: Alvin P. Smith Award for Outstanding Student in Medical Physiology (1995), 1st Place Biological Sciences Student Research Week (2000) Texas A&M University, 1st Place Graduate Student Research Symposium (2001) Texas A&M Health Science Center, with Honors
  • Post-Graduate Education: Outstanding Abstract, Thick and Thin Filament Regulation in Striated Muscle Meeting, May 4-6, 2008 – Madison, Wisconsin

Licensure & Certification

  • Advanced Heart Failure/Transplant Cardiology, 2014 – present
  • Cardiovascular Diseases, 2010 – present