• Skip to main content
  • Skip to navigation
  • Accessibility
  • Contact Us
Government of Western Australia Crest
Government of Western Australia
Government of Western Australia Crest

Additional Menu

  • Accessibility
  • Contact us
Go to WA Government search
  • About Us
    • Contact us
    • Feedback, compliments and complaints
      • Patient reviews via Care Opinion
    • Conduct and standards
    • Executive Committee
    • Health Service Provider
    • Community Advisory Council
    • Vision and values
    • Charlies Alumni and Archives
  • For Patients & Visitors
    • Visiting us
    • Emergencies
    • Aishwarya’s CARE Call
    • Clinic appointments (outpatients)
    • Video Consultation
    • Elective surgery
    • Sepsis
    • Falls Management
    • Patient fact sheets
    • Freedom of Information (FOI)
    • Informed consent
    • Interpreters
    • Our Healthcare Standards
    • Overseas patient fees
    • Private patients
    • Rights and responsibilities
  • Our Services
  • For Health Professionals
    • Outpatient review
    • Referring Patients
    • Referral forms
    • Outpatient services
    • For GPs
    • Centre for Nursing Education
    • Outpatient-letters
    • Medical Education Unit
    • Simulation Centre
      • Directions to the Simulation Centre
    • Staff exposures and absences form
  • Research
    • Department of Research
      • Research 101
      • Who can I discuss my research project with?
      • Contacts
      • News, Events and Annual Reports
      • FAQs
      • Grants
    • Hospital library
    • Research Foundation
    • Australian Inherited Retinal Disease Registry and DNA Bank
    • Centre for Nursing Research
  • Work with us
    • Employee benefits
    • About us
    • Staff stories
    • International and interstate recruitment
    • Nursing
      • Acute Medical Wards
      • Casual and relief
      • Critical Care
      • Rehabilitation and Aged Care
      • Specialist Services, Outpatient Clinics and Imaging
      • Surgical Services
    • Medical
      • Interns
      • Overseas trained doctors
    • Nursing graduates
    • Volunteering
      • Auxiliary Retail Shop
      • Buggy driver
      • Cancer Centre outpatients
      • Clinic helper – Breast Centre and Transit Ward
      • Concierge and wayfinding
      • Emergency Department Support
      • Falls Education
      • Lived experience and consumer engagement
      • Moments That Matter (Dementia/Delirium Program)
      • Patient Transport Driver
      • Patient Visitor Volunteer
    • Centre for Nursing Education
    • Fellowships and student placements
  • Latest News
  1. Home
  2. News
  3. 2026
  4. 05
  5. 19
  6. AI breakthrough in heart disease began at Charlies

AI breakthrough in heart disease began at Charlies

AI breakthrough in heart disease began at Charlies

Professor Joshua Lewis1 Professor Joshua Lewis
19/05/2026

A Western Australian researcher and his global team have shown that artificial intelligence (AI) can detect telltale signs of heart disease from low dose bone scans, potentially unlocking a new defence against one of Australia’s leading causes of death.

Edith Cowan University Professor Joshua Lewis began as a research fellow at Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital in 2009, where he first explored using DEXA bone density scans combined with AI to detect heart disease long before symptoms appear.

The AI algorithm analyses DEXA scans, typically used to assess osteoporosis, to identify calcium build-up in the abdominal aorta, a key early sign of cardiovascular disease that may be detected years before a heart attack.

Currently, detecting calcification is only limited to a specialist review, which can be expensive and time consuming.

Professor Lewis said the results could mean that about 700,000 Australians who have a DEXA bone scan annually could also learn about their heart health using the same machine.

“Heart disease is one of Australia’s biggest killers and what we’ve done in the research has shown we may have found a new way to spot risk earlier,” he said.

“Vascular calcification often starts in the abdominal aorta before blood vessels such as the heart and so if you can detect it earlier, then you can make those changes, whether they be diet or lifestyle or medications, to prevent going on to having a heart attack or stroke.”

For Pippa Luke, finding out she had blood vessel disease changed her life for the better.

“Getting the results was definitely a catalyst for increasing my knowledge and awareness of heart health because otherwise it’s very silent, you don’t know you have anything,” she said.

“It motivated me to reassess my lifestyle and look at changes, which included regular exercise as well as cardio and resistance exercises, also adopting a Mediterranean diet, and getting more regular heart health checks.

“Without the scans, you can go blindly on until the calcification build up is too great and you end up having heart attack or a much longer road back to better health.”

Researchers hope this technology will be available within few years.

Previous Next
Last Updated: 19/05/2026
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • YouTube

Footer menu

  • wa.gov.au
  • Copyright
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy
  • Sitemap
  • Contact Us

Brought to you by the Department of Health, Western Australia

© Government of Western Australia 2018 to