Mohammad H. Imam is a cardiologist based in Melbourne, VIC 3010. In his day-to-day work, he looks after people where the heart and the body’s automatic nervous system don’t quite line up. That can be hard to live with, and symptoms often come and go, even when tests look “almost normal” at first.
His focus includes conditions like autonomic neuropathy and diabetic neuropathy. He also supports people with familial dysautonomia and long QT syndrome. These issues can affect heart rhythm, blood pressure, and how the body responds to things like standing up, stress, or changes in sleep and food. At times, patients can feel dizzy, faint, have racing heartbeats, or notice unusual changes in sweating and temperature.
In many cases, care starts with listening closely and putting the story together with the right heart checks. Mohammad helps patients understand what might be going on, and what can be tracked between visits. He works with other health professionals when it’s helpful, especially where diabetes, nerve problems, and heart rhythm issues overlap. That teamwork matters, because these conditions often need more than one approach.
Over time, he’s developed experience in helping people manage ongoing symptoms and reduce the risks that can come with abnormal rhythms. Long QT syndrome, for example, needs careful attention to triggers and medicines that may affect heart electrical timing. For autonomic problems, the goal is often to make day-to-day life steadier, safer, and more predictable.
Mohammad’s education includes medical training and cardiology study, with ongoing learning as treatment options and testing methods change. He stays up to date with current clinical guidance and practical best practice, so care decisions aren’t stuck in the past.
There’s also a place for clinical trials and newer studies in some heart and nerve-related conditions. If a trial is suitable and available, that can be discussed as part of the overall plan. The main thing is still the same: calm, clear care that focuses on what’s happening for you right now.
For people in Melbourne dealing with long QT syndrome or nerve-related heart symptoms, Mohammad H. Imam offers a steady, plain-language approach. The aim is simple—help you understand the condition, manage symptoms, and feel supported as things change.