University of maryland cardiology program




















And every one of our cardiologists wants to go out in the community and do the same thing. An equal amount of dedication exists among program researchers, who constantly seek to make scientific advances that extend to as many children as possible. These investigators study the broad spectrum of factors that contribute to pediatric heart diseases, such as childhood obesity and pediatric hypertension.

The QMWG is dedicated to the continual monitoring and improvement of clinical care and patient outcomes. To help cope with their grief, they wanted to educate others about the disease.

So they organized an annual golf tournament to raise awareness and money for research to prevent it from affecting other young athletes and their families.

Paca Street, 7th floor Baltimore, MD office fax. Department of Pediatrics. Trust me, this is a talk your patients cannot afford for you to miss! Chertow, M. Over the last several years he has solidified his role as a world expert in the field of virology and today speaks on a topic he has published a great deal about, Influenza virus.

Tis the season for influenza, and if you ever hope to survive it, you will listen to this talk! Today we welcome Giora Netzer M. His passion for knowledge led to his appointment as the Director of Clinical Research and has yielded a tremendous breadth of publications.

Today he focuses on his true passion: how to assist family members care for their loved ones both in the ICU and in the post-ICU setting. Trust me, this is a topic that is often overlooked and one that can truly mean life or death for your patients! Today we welcome one of the gurus in anti-coagulant reversal, John J. Today he is gracious enough to spend 60 minutes with us, and not a second can be missed if you EVER expect to take care of a patient with a head bleed on AC!!

Today we welcome Dr. In addition to being a brilliant clinician, Dr. It is safe to say, he is one of the most brilliant minds we have at Maryland and today he takes an hour to give us a simplified look at the way the kidneys deal with acids and bases. This talk will give you a common sense look at renal physiology and just might give you the information you need to crack the next complex renal failure case!

Today we are very excited to host Dr. Lakhmir S. Chawla, nephrologist, intensivist, and international expert on the management of shock. Today we have a talk that Dr. This talk was SO educational and useful that we begged him for the opportunity to share this knowledge. Thankfully he agreed! So sit back and prepare to have a concentrated 40 minutes of COPD pearls and a fantastic discussion on just how well we do with lung transplants!

Today we were able to convince Dr. Gunjan Parikh to grace the lecture hall and give us an amazing update in the field of neurocritical care! Today we will go through everything from the newest studies of tPA use in intracranial hemorrhage to the use of diabetic medications to improve outcomes in CVA patients.

This talk cannot be missed no matter which ICU you find yourself in! Today we welcome back Dr. Shah takes us back to the basics of ventilator use.

Even the experts in the audience will find tips and tricks to take back to the ICU in order to improve patient care. And for all the budding intensivists out there, this is a talk you cannot miss!! The history lesson alone is worth the listen, but it is a topic that is often overlooked and misdiagnosed.

You might be surprised after this talk at just how many of these patients you have missed! We are excited to welcome back Dr.

Joseph R. Shiber is currently on loan to us here at the University of Maryland as he completes his Critical Care Medicine Fellowship. After many requests he has agreed to share one of his most requested lectures: A history of resuscitative medicine. Today we are happy to welcome Dr. He hails to us most recently from Christiana Health Care System where he completed his internal medicine residency before returning home to UMMC, where he spent his medical school training.

Today he shares some information extracted from a VERY difficult asthma case that presented to his service several months ago. This is a fantastic review of the random things we attempt to keep asthmatic airways open. So before you reach for that EpiPen or start the ketamine drip, you should take 45 minutes and learn about why those ideas may not be as helpful as you think. Today we are fortunate that Dr. Herr tackles a topic that often stares us right in the face, offering us all the knowledge we could ever need to treat patients, and yet we ignore it: End Tidal CO2!!

Today we are joined by Dr. Rubin is a recent transplant from Boston where he served as director of nephrology education and director of the Transplant Nephrology Fellowship at Massachusetts General Hospital. She has perfected the art of transitioning care between physicians, and today she will delve into the complicated topic of transitioning patients from their ICU bed all the way to their trip home with family.

If there is one thing that Dr. In fact over the last several years he has published numerous papers on the immunology of lung disease, focusing on T cell use, macrophage response, and the changes to inflammation that occur with aging. Today he focuses his brilliance to a 45 minute talk that is essential if you ever want to truly understand what sepsis does to your patients!

Today we are visited by Dr. Rory Spiegel. Today he will be doing his best to concentrate his brilliance into a 45 minute presentation. I have heard a ton of lectures on EBM, but never before has one made so much sense in such a short period of time! Michael Winters is the medical director of the Department of Emergency Medicine at the University of Maryland and a brilliant speaker on critical care and emergency medicine topics.

Winters has become one of the most well known and widely published experts in the field of practicing critical care medicine in the emergency room. You cannot find a more knowledgable and dedicated educator, so I hope you take advantage of this fantastic lecture! Your patients will thank you for it!! He is also well known as the creator and host of Critical Care Perspectives in Emergency Medicine Twitter: critcareguys.

Today we have Dr. So obviously with this phenomenal educational pedigree, Dr. Tisherman is the perfect individual to lead a discussion on the one topic we only get one shot to master: Emergency and Surgical Airways! Is this the new mechanical ventilation resus end-point? Today we are fortunate to welcome Dr. Kenneth E. Needless to say, he has spent a majority of his life making medicine run like an efficient machine.

However, today Dr. Wood explains the real issue plaguing our society. This is a lecture I assure you cannot be watched just once….

Relationship between funding source and conclusion among nutrition-related scientific articles. PLoS Med. Given their stated interests and career goals, we fully expect that it will not be difficult to generate one or two additional Research-Related Training topics.

The Co-Directors, with the assistance of second-year trainees, will develop and present this session with appropriate readings being available prior to the session. This component is designed for second-year trainees to significantly advance their career development and to prepare them for the next steps in their careers.

As such, this component primarily focuses on issues related to graduate school, such as mentoring, development of a Curriculum Vita, preparing for graduate school, GRE preparation, graduate school admission process, selecting a graduate school and advisor, and research and academic careers. One session will also be dedicated to Mock Graduate School Interviews.

At the end of the summer UM STAR program, each trainee will make a minute oral PowerPoint presentation similar to what would take place at a national scientific meeting summarizing their summer research project. James Hagberg's previous research assessed the genetics of CVD risk factor responses to exercise training in sedentary older men and women. Trainees could analyze new relationships among the genotype and phenotype data, or they could measure new phenotypes in the plasma samples or genotype new polymorphisms in the DNA samples.

More recently, Dr. Hagberg has studied the effects of exercise and lack of exercise on circulating angiogenic cells, adult stem cells that have regenerative capacities within the CV system, in middle- to older-aged healthy individuals and clinical populations.

Hagberg has a long history of mentoring as the major advisor for 16 PhD and 20 masters students. She studies cardiac mitochondrial energy production matching to energy demand. She is funded by the American Heart Association to investigate how the cellular milieu affects energy production in cardiac mitochondria in an animal model of heart failure with preserved left ventricular ejection fraction.

Trainees could participate in bench research, performing experiments measuring calcium uptake in heart mitochondria. Glancy has mentored a number of undergraduate and graduate students during her graduate school and postdoctoral training.

His laboratory develops rationally-designed therapeutic biotechnologies involving exosomes, other extracellular vesicles and engineered proteins. A driving force behind his work is to translate discoveries and innovations into clinical therapies. He currently collaborates with Dr. Hagberg to examine the effects of exercise on endothelial function to enhance therapeutic vascularization. Jay also directs an honors undergraduate student team that is investigating similar mechanisms to potentially treat osteoarthritis and has mentored a number of masters and PhD students.

He has published 30 scientific papers. Prior studies the mechanisms by which the risk for age-associated cardiometabolic diseases, functional deficits and associated vascular impairments are improved in older adults with exercise training.

Trainees could analyze relationships among novel disease predictors and cardiometabolic phenotypes or assay samples for novel targets. He has mentored a number of graduate students, as well as six postdoctoral fellows and junior faculty members. Sushant Ranadive earned his PhD in exercise physiology from the University of Illinois and completed postdoctoral training at the Mayo Clinic.

He joined the University of Maryland faculty in He has 41 publications on vascular function and exercise training in postmenopausal women and sex differences in vascular function, inflammation and oxidative stress.

Trainees can participate in data collection and analyses for these projects. Ranadive has mentored a high school student, three undergraduate students, one medical student and one MD-PhD student previously at the Mayo Clinic. Carson Smith earned his PhD in in exercise science from the University of Georgia and completed postdoctoral training at the University of Florida in psychophysiology.

He joined the University of Maryland faculty in and has 40 publications. His lab studies the efficacy of physical activity in improving metabolic health and brain function and structure, as measured by MRI, in older adults at increased risk for Alzheimer's disease. He has studied the effects of exercise on cerebral blood flow using arterial spin labeling and brain activation using functional MRI. She studies molecular and cellular mechanisms underlying Hutchinson Gilford progeria syndrome HGPS , a rare premature aging disease.

Previous research has shown a profound and massive loss of smooth muscle cells in large arteries in both human patients and HGPS mouse models, strongly suggesting a connection of this phenotype with the CV malfunction and death associated with HGPS. The primary goal of her laboratory is to elucidate the molecular pathway behind this phenotype. To investigate this question, her laboratory applies a suite of techniques from cell biology, stem cell biology, to genomics.

Her current collaborators include Drs.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000