Explore the uncharted frontiers of medicine--where artificial intelligence is helping clinicians detect disease earlier, uncover hidden signals, and reshape the future of care.
Written by Paul A. Friedman, M.D., chair of the Department of Cardiovascular Medicine at Mayo Clinic, and Itzhak (Zachi) Attia, Ph.D., M.B.A., a pioneering AI scientist in cardiology at Mayo Clinic, this book offers a rare, firsthand account of how artificial intelligence is being developed and applied in real clinical settings by leaders at one of the world's most trusted healthcare institutions.
The story begins with the unexpected collaboration between Friedman, a cardiologist, and Attia, an electrical engineering graduate student at the time. Their shared curiosity led to a breakthrough algorithm capable of passively detecting dangerous potassium levels in the blood. It was later integrated with smartwatch technology, allowing individuals to have a portable ECG with AI-assisted insights to flag potential heart risks in real time.
That spirit of inquiry opened the door to an uncharted space in medicine--drawing in a broader community of clinicians and data scientists who began asking urgent, foundational questions about what more could be discovered. These collaborations sparked new approaches, fresh insights, and meaningful shifts in clinical practice, including AI-driven advances that made it possible to detect early risk of heart disease and, in some cases, reduce reliance on multiple imaging tests to diagnose other cardiac conditions.
As these innovations have taken shape, their impact has expanded far beyond any single discovery. Artificial intelligence is reshaping care--helping clinicians detect disease sooner, understand risk more clearly, and make more informed decisions. It is revealing patterns embedded in everyday clinical data that were previously unseen, opening new pathways into the uncharted dimensions of human health and disease.
At the same time, the book highlights a quieter but equally important transformation. By reducing the burden of data interpretation and documentation, AI is helping restore time, attention, and human connection to the center of care. And as these advances continue to evolve, they raise new questions--reminding us that medicine is still, in many ways, uncharted, and that each discovery is only the beginning of what remains to be understood.
Grounded in real-world innovation, clinical experience, and the authors' own work at Mayo Clinic, this is a clear, accessible guide to one of the most important shifts in modern medicine--and what it means for patients, clinicians, and the future of health.