Samuel & Jean Frankel Cardiovascular Center
At the Frankel Cardiovascular Center, the doctors and researchers who make huge advances in medicine are the same ones who care for you.
Cardiovascular disease is progressive and takes a different course in each and every patient.
That's why it's important to make sure you or your loved ones get the best possible care right from the beginning — from the University of Michigan Health Frankel Cardiovascular Center.
Make an Appointment
Advancing Cardiovascular Health
The U-M Health Samuel & Jean Frankel Cardiovascular Center is on the forefront of innovative, advanced efforts to combat the magnitude of cardiovascular disease. We're doing it with expert nationally-ranked patient care, research at our Cardiovascular Research Center and education at the University of Michigan Medical School, where the next generation of cardiovascular physicians and researchers are trained.
Patient Care
At the Frankel Cardiovascular Center, you’ll get comprehensive cardiovascular care from our nationally ranked team, who are committed to taking care of your heart, from preventive care to advanced cases.
Research
Working within the Department and in collaboration with colleagues throughout the University, our faculty have developed an extensive program of research in ophthalmology and the visual sciences.
Education
Learn how education and training at the U-M Medical School prepare the next generation of medical professionals and researchers.
Michigan's #1 Heart Hospital
U-M Health Frankel Cardiovascular Center has been recognized as one of the nation's top heart hospitals by U.S. News & World Report for 2025-2026.
Advanced Heart Care, Customized for You
Take the Next Step
Make a Cardiovascular Appointment
Our call center representatives can help you with answers to questions you may have about treatment options, care providers, clinical research trials, services for your loved ones, and support services.
Visit our Make an Appointment page for more details about what to expect when you call.
Call: 888-287-1082
- Option 1: Cardiology patients (new or existing)
- Option 2: Cardiac Surgery or Vascular Surgery patients
- Option 3: Speak with a nurse (for patients with new or increased symptoms)
- Option 4: Cardiovascular Testing
Please note: some specialty services require a physician referral. We can help you through this process.
Find a Heart Doctor
Looking for the right heart specialist? The Find a Doctor tool makes it easy to search for expert providers by name, specialty, or location—so you can connect with the care you need, close to home.
Are you a physician looking to refer a patient to a U-M Cardiovascular Physician?
- Call M-LINE at 800-962-3555
- Visit our For Cardiovascular Health Professionals page for more details
For Health Providers: Visit our For Health Providers section for more information for our valued referring providers.
Michigan Answers
Michigan Answers blend over a century of teaching, research, and patient care with a passion for transforming lives, pushing the limits of what's possible. They inspire confidence, hope, and the pathway to breakthroughs.
Bentley's Michigan Answer
Bentley's Michigan Answer
As Marguerita Booth had never heard of a child being born with their organs on the outside of their body. And yet as she lay in the darkened room of her first ultrasound of her first pregnancy, she was suddenly introduced to a condition that surprisingly affects 1 in every 3600 babies.
Kade's Michigan Answer
Kade's Michigan Answer
Alone. Scared. Never knowing who to trust or where to turn for help. That’s how Kade Fitzgerald of Jackson, Michigan lived the first 32 years of his life. Assigned female at birth, Kade knew at age 6 that he was meant to be a man.
Merriah and Melliah's Michigan Answer
Merriah and Melliah's Michigan Answer
Few moments eclipse the joy of discovering that you’re pregnant with twins. But for 37-year-old Merrick and 37-year-old Mychal, the news that they’d be having fraternal girls with an expected delivery date of Christmas Day 2020 made the news even more exciting.
Carter's Michigan Answer
Carter's Michigan Answer
Carter Hilton celebrated his sixth birthday by doing what he loves most: running around his backyard, dancing with his younger brother, and being chased throughout the house by his mom. It helps that Carter is a naturally exuberant child. It also helps that Michigan Medicine performed the first in-womb spina bifida surgery in Michigan nearly four months before Carter was born.
Sierra's Michigan Answer
Sierra's Michigan Answer
Imagine two patients. Both the same age and height. The same gender and race. Both have a similar medical history. Two people, almost identical in every way. So, why does one of them, seemingly at random, develop diabetes?
Dr. Valbuena's Michigan Answer
Dr. Valbuena's Michigan Answer
Most aspiring physicians study medicine with the hopes of saving lives, being on the cutting edge of research, or developing the latest therapies and technologies. For Dr. Valeria Valbuena, it was all of the above, plus one additional life-affirming goal.
Dr. Vydiswaran's Michigan Answer
Dr. Vydiswaran's Michigan Answer
What if the true power of social media isn’t found in a like, tweet or follow? For an emerging field of research taking place at Michigan Medicine, it’s the data inside social media that may have the power to give patients bigger answers and better outcomes.
Dr. Cunnane's Michigan Answer
Dr. Cunnane's Michigan Answer
Since 1958, millions of lives have been saved by what could arguably be considered as medicine’s biggest breakthrough – the pacemaker. And while its technology has dramatically improved over the last 63 years, chief concerns regarding the pacemaker have always been that it was too big and bulky and that the wires leading from it would sometimes break. But in February of 2020, Michigan Medicine helped change all of that.
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