Bo Remenyi is a cardiologist based in Tiwi, Northern Territory. The practice address is 105 Rocklands Dr, Tiwi, NT 0810, Australia. He works with people who need heart checks and ongoing care, especially when it comes to valve problems and heart rhythm concerns that can affect day to day life.
In many cases, care involves problems that link back to past infections, like rheumatic fever, which can lead to long-term heart changes. That can include issues such as mitral stenosis and mitral valve regurgitation, and also aortic regurgitation. Over time, these conditions may change how the heart pumps, so follow-up matters.
Bo also looks after patients dealing with inflammatory and infectious issues that can overlap with heart health. For example, strep throat and reactive arthritis, as well as septic arthritis and infectious arthritis, can be part of the bigger picture when doctors are trying to understand what’s causing ongoing symptoms.
Along with heart-focused appointments, the clinic list includes conditions like arthritis, chorea, endomyocardial fibrosis, scabies, and impetigo. At times, these come up because they can be connected to infection and inflammation, which sometimes need careful assessment alongside the heart side of things.
Patients seen may include adults and younger people who need support after symptoms start, or after a diagnosis has already been made. Some visits are about getting a clear plan, while others are about ongoing monitoring, especially if a valve condition is mild one week and needs closer attention the next.
Experience is listed as “not provided” here, so there aren’t specific years or roles available in this profile. Education details also aren’t shown. What is clear is the focus on heart health, particularly valve disease, and linked conditions that can travel together.
Research and clinical trials: there are no clinical trial details listed, and no research updates are included in this profile. So the best next step is usually a direct discussion with the clinic to confirm what’s available and how care is done.
If you’re coming in with chest symptoms, shortness of breath, or a known valve issue, it helps to bring any reports you have. The aim is to keep things practical—understand what’s going on, and make a plan that fits the person’s situation.