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  1. University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences
  2. College of Medicine
  3. Author: Tamara Robinson
  4. Page 25

Tamara Robinson

Recent Faculty Appointments — June 2021

Please join us in welcoming these recent additions to the College of Medicine faculty.

Department of Microbiology and Immunology

Matthew Jorgenson, Ph.D.

Dr. Matthew Jorgenson

Matthew Jorgenson, Ph.D., has joined the Department of Microbiology and Immunology faculty as an Assistant Professor. Dr. Jorgenson received his doctorate from the University of Iowa. He completed his postdoctoral fellowship at UAMS and served in a non-tenure track faculty position prior to his current appointment. Dr. Jorgenson’s research relates to the shape of bacteria that is determined primarily by a rigid casing known as the peptidoglycan wall. His work focuses on understanding how cells produce and maintain the peptidoglycan layer, by studying cytoskeletal proteins, peptidoglycan modifying enzymes and other morphological mechanisms.

Department of Pathology

Bolni Marius Nagalo, Ph.D.

Dr. Bolni Marius Nagalo

Bolni Marius Nagalo, Ph.D., has joined the Department of Pathology as an Assistant Professor in the Experimental Pathology Division. Dr. Nagalo received his undergraduate degree, a master’s in molecular genetics and his doctorate in molecular biology from the University of Ouaga-JKZ in Burkina Faso, West Africa, where he went on to serve as a fellow in the Department of Genetics and Molecular Biology. He completed a postdoctoral fellowship in the Department of Molecular Medicine at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, and joined the Mayo faculty. He served in a number of research positions at Mayo’s Rochester and Scottsdale, Arizona, campuses and was an Assistant Professor of Oncology and of Molecular Medicine at the Mayo Clinic College of Medicine and Science from 2019 until his recruitment to UAMS.

Dr. Nagalo’s research interests include translational virotherapy and gene therapy for patients with advanced  hepatocellular carcinoma and pancreatic cancers, and addressing health disparities in liver cancer, cancer therapy and cancer-focused research. He has received numerous honors during his training and career to date, including a Mentored Research Scientist Career Development Award (K01) from the National Institutes of Health/National Cancer Institute in 2018, the Welcome Trust Mobility and Skills Training Award from Cardiff University in 2018, and the Kathryn H. and Roger Penske Career Development Award at Mayo Clinic’s Arizona Campus in 2019.

Department of Psychiatry

Tisha Deen, Ph.D.

Dr. Tisha Deen

Tisha Deen, Ph.D., has joined the faculty as an Associate Professor in the departments of Psychiatry and Internal Medicine. Dr. Deen practices in the Integrated Behavioral Health Program in the Integrated Medicine Service Line. She also supervises psychology interns in the Department of Psychiatry.

Dr. Deen was a clinical psychologist and primary care mental health integration (PCMHI) psychologist with the Central Arkansas Veterans Healthcare System (CAVHS) for five years prior to joining UAMS.

She received her bachelor’s in psychology and master’s and doctorate degrees in clinical psychology at the University of Arkansas, Fayetteville. Dr. Deen completed her clinical internship in the UAMS Psychiatric Research Institute. She continued her training as a VA Health Services Research and Development (HSR&D) postdoctoral fellow in the Center for Mental Healthcare and Outcomes Research (CeMHOR) at CAVHS.

Greer Sullivan, M.D., MSPH

Dr. Greer Sullivan

Greer Sullivan, M.D., MSPH, has rejoined the faculty as a Professor in the Department of Psychiatry. Dr. Sullivan initially joined the department as an Associate Professor in 1997 and in 2002 was promoted to Professor in the Center for Health Services Research and the UAMS Fay W. Boozman College of Public Health. She moved to California in 2014 to become a professor at the University of California Riverside School of Medicine and an adjunct senior scientist with the RAND Corporation.

Dr. Sullivan returned to UAMS in April and sees patients in the Psychiatric Research Institute (PRI) Walker Family Clinic and the AR-Connect program. She also directs the Department of Psychiatry’s Research Academic Track and serves as Medical Director of PRI’s Center for Trauma Prevention, Recovery & Innovation (CTPRI).

Dr. Sullivan received her medical degree from the University of Mississippi School of Medicine in Jackson. She interned at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, Texas, and completed her residency in psychiatry at the UCLA Neuropsychiatric Institute and West Los Angeles VA Hospital.

Samidha Tripathi, M.D.

Dr. Samidha Tripathi

Samidha Tripathi, M.D., is rejoining the Department of Psychiatry as an Assistant Professor in July. Dr. Tripathi will help develop a Consult Liaison Psychiatry Fellowship as well as serve as Co-Director of the Psychiatry Clerkship for third-year medical students.

Dr. Tripathi served as an Assistant Professor in the department and attending psychiatrist in the Psychiatric Research Institute for four years before relocating to the University of Washington in Seattle in July 2020. She received honors while at UAMS for her work in the Psychiatry Clerkship and resident education. She also received the Early Career Development Award from the Association of Academic Psychiatry in 2019 and the Irma Bland Award from the American Psychiatric Association in 2020, and was appointed as a Fellow in the American Psychiatric Association last January.

Dr. Tripathi received her medical degree from Kasturba Medical College in Mangalore, Karnataka, India. She completed her residency in general psychiatry at Einstein Medical Center in Philadelphia and a fellowship in psychosomatic medicine/consultation and liaison psychiatry at the University of Pennsylvania.

Filed Under: Faculty Updates

Accolades – June 23, 2021

Here are this week’s Accolades, a roundup of some of the honors and accomplishments of College of Medicine and UAMS faculty, staff, residents, fellows and students I’ve heard about recently!

National PM&R Award
Congratulations to Dr. Kevin Means, Professor and Chair of the Department of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation, on being selected to receive the Distinguished Member Award from the American Academy of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation (AAPM&R). The award honors pioneering physiatrists, clinicians, researchers and public servants who, like Dr. Means, have made significant contributions to the specialty and to individuals with disabilities and populations at risk for disabilities. Dr. Means will be honored at the AAPM&R Annual Assembly in November. He has been a leader in PM&R clinical care and training in Arkansas for over 35 years as a founding faculty member of the department at UAMS. He also has served as Medical Director for the Baptist Health Rehabilitation Institute since 1997.

ECMO Heroes
The UAMS ECMO Team ended last week on a high note, successfully completing extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) treatment of the third and fourth patients to receive the life-support technology at UAMS for severe complications of COVID-19. The team has a 100% success rate with ECMO to date, setting the first four patients on the path toward recovery. ECMO technology externally pumps and oxygenates the blood of a patient, allowing the heart and lungs to rest for days, weeks or even months. We once again salute the entire ECMO team for their dedication and hard work to get this vital service off to such a remarkable start.

National Service
Dr. Ramona Rhodes
, Associate Professor of Geriatrics and Associate Director for Health Services Research in the Geriatric Research Education and Clinical Center at the Central Arkansas Veterans Healthcare System, has been elected to the American Geriatrics Society (AGS) Board of Directors. The AGS provides leadership on geriatrics patient care, research, professional and public education and public policy for health care professionals, policymakers and the public. Dr. Rhodes is passionate about examining disparities in health care for older adults and those at the end of life. She currently chairs the AGS Ethics Committee and is Section Editor for Ethnogeriatrics and Special Populations for the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.

Welcome, Medical Scholars in Public Health!
We were delighted to introduce the inaugural class of our post-baccalaureate program, Medical Scholars in Public Health (MSPH), at a June 9 reception. The program is a collaboration of the colleges of Medicine, Public Health and Pharmacy and is directed by the Department of Emergency Medicine’s Dr. Jerrilyn Jones. Associate Dean for Student Affairs Dr. Sara Tariq chaired the MSPH planning committee at the request of now Transitional Dean Dr. Christopher Westfall. Many UAMS leaders were instrumental in developing the MSPH program. I hope you will take a moment to read about the initiative and the reception here.

Meanwhile, a warm welcome to our pioneering MSPH students: Austin Anderson, Michael Bunyard, Florenz Cruz-Artiga, Samuel Edogun, Madison Hershberger, Savannah Hickman, Tierra Holland, Xavius Hymes, Kayla Jimmerson, Maria Meneses-Ramos, Nidal Shah, Xochitl Shields, Stefany Sierra, Alexandria Smith and Savannah Stacks. We are so glad you are here!

Mindfulness Meets Anatomy
What may seem like an unlikely intersection of mindfulness and work in the Anatomy Lab is addressed in a thoughtful article by Dr. Edgar Meyer, Assistant Professor of Neurobiology and Developmental Sciences, in Anatomy Now, the newsletter of the American Association for Anatomy. Dr. Meyer, a member of the association’s Committee for Early-Career Anatomists, discusses the value of incorporating mindfulness practices into the daily lives of anatomists, anatomy educators and students who work in the anatomy lab. Dr. Meyer brings expertise to the topic from his role on the faculty team that facilitates mindfulness sessions at UAMS.

In the Spotlight
I recently shared the great news that Dr. Jerrilyn Jones, Associate Professor of Emergency Medicine, has been selected to receive the Arkansas First Lady’s Woman in Public Service Award from the Women’s Foundation of Arkansas, an honor highlighted on the cover and inside the June issue of Little Rock Soiree. It was also a joy to read about Dr. Jones and Dr. Ronda Henry-Tillman, Professor of Surgery and Chief of Breast Oncology, in Soiree’s “Women to Watch 2021” special section featuring Q&As with outstanding professionals who are making an impact in health care, business, philanthropy and the community.

Pediatric Angioplasty Insights
Dr. Harrison Cobb, an Assistant Professor of Pediatrics and pediatric cardiologist at Arkansas Children’s Northwest, is the first author on an article in Catheterization and Cardiovascular Interventions, the international journal of the Society for Cardiovascular Angiography & Interventions. “Cutting balloon angioplasty on branch pulmonary artery stenosis in pediatric patients” is the culmination of research he conducted with Pediatric Cardiology colleagues during his fellowship at UAMS and Arkansas Children’s prior to joining the faculty last July. Associate Professor Dr. Michael Angtuaco is the senior author on the paper.

Anatomy Scholars
Two years ago, five M3 and M4 medical students were recruited as “Anatomy Scholars” to serve as teaching assistants in the Human Structure course for freshman medical students. The program – now entering its third year – has been a resounding success. Kudos to Module Director Dr. David Davies and the entire anatomy teaching faculty – and the outstanding students who set a very high bar as the first scholars. The inaugural students included 2021 graduates Drs. AlleaBelle Gongola, Jared Gowen, Hamilton Newhart and Merry (Molly) Peckham, who were juniors when the program started in 2019, and Dr. Zachary Schwartz, who was then a senior.

The Anatomy Scholars presented medical and surgical education papers in a weekly journal club, devised a survey, and began working on a manuscript and research abstract. This month, they received word that their manuscript “Anatomy Scholars Program for Medical Students Entering a Surgical Residency” has been accepted for publication in the journal Medical Science Educator. Last fall, the group’s first abstract, “Anatomy Scholars Program Develops Nontechnical Skills in Medical Students,” was published in the Journal of the American College of Surgeons. Faculty contributors on the publications included Dr. Davies and the Department of Surgery’s Dr. Mary Katherine Kimbrough and Dr. Carol Thrush, along with Rebecca Reif, MHA.

Last fall, two extraordinary M3 students, Jake Allison and Alexander Kwok, served as Anatomy Scholars, which required a concerted and creative response to restrictions posed by the COVID-19 pandemic.

This year, the Human Structure team looks forward to working in the dissection laboratory with our five new 2021 Anatomy Scholars: senior Paige Gocke and juniors Brian Bumpous, Mallory Heft, Kyle Jackson and Carter Pacheco. These excellent students were selected from a very competitive pool of applicants. Congratulations!

First Author
2021 graduate Dr. AlleaBelle Gongola, one of the Anatomy Scholars noted above, also was the first author on a paper about the impacts of smoking and alcohol on mortality and complications in rib fracture patients treated at UAMS. The paper has just been published in Trauma Surgery & Acute Care Open. Her primary mentor was Dr. Kyle Kalkwarf, Assistant Professor in the Division of Trauma and Acute Care Surgery. Dr. Gongola starts her General Surgery residency at the University of Kentucky Medical Center this summer.

Above & Beyond
Finally this week, it is a great pleasure to congratulate this year’s recipients of the Chris Hacker Awards for Excellence in Medical Ethics. Kudos to all three honorees for going above and beyond in demonstrating exemplary commitment to ethical issues that impact patient care at UAMS. The University Hospital Ethics Committee presents the annual award to a faculty member, a non-faculty staff member and a resident.

Dr. Nikhil Meena, Associate Professor in the Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine and Director of the Medical Intensive Care Unit, was nominated by many colleagues because of his compassionate work with patients and their families, often in very challenging circumstances requiring difficult conversations. “He handles all encounters with empathy and authenticity,” a colleague wrote. And while COVID-19 ramped up in Arkansas, Dr. Meena “rose to the challenge,” spending continuous days and nights at the hospital to fight for critically ill patients. “Throughout, Dr. Meena continues to impart his generous spirit with patients and colleagues alike.”

Surgery/Trauma APRN Britney Beumeler was honored as a “fierce patient advocate” whose compassion and commitment to medical ethics has shined more than ever during the pandemic. Adamant that no patient dies alone, she has sat with dying patients and held their hand when families could not be present. Before visitors were again allowed in the hospital, she often wheeled patients down to the first floor so they could see their family members through the windows.

Obstetrics and Gynecology Chief Resident Dr. Georgia Gamble was honored for her work with interdisciplinary colleagues to work though ethically challenging situations and for serving as a strong advocate for patients. “Dr. Gamble handles difficult situations with ease and always puts the patient’s needs first,” a nominator wrote. “She has shown honesty and integrity with difficulty issues.”

Filed Under: Accolades

Accolades – June 16, 2021

Here are this week’s Accolades, a roundup of some of the honors and accomplishments of College of Medicine and UAMS faculty, staff, residents, fellows and students I’ve heard about recently!

Best Children’s Hospitals
Congratulations to our colleagues at Arkansas Children’s on their national rankings in U.S. News & World Report’s 2021-2022 Best Children’s Hospitals. Arkansas Children’s ranked nationally in four specialties: Cardiology & Heart Surgery, Nephrology, Pulmonology & Lung Surgery, and Urology. Arkansas Children’s is also ranked within the Southeast Region along with pediatric hospitals in Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina and Tennessee. As President and CEO Marcy Doderer, FACHE, noted in her message to the Arkansas Children’s Team yesterday, this important national recognition reflects the incredible work of the team and the strong commitment to provide the very best care for the children of Arkansas. Thank you all.

Serving Arkansas Physicians
Congratulations to Dr. Danny Wilkerson, Professor of Anesthesiology and Obstetrics and Gynecology, on his inauguration as the 2021-2022 President of the Arkansas Medical Society. As AMS President, Dr. Wilkerson plans to continue the organization’s work to address health care disparities in Arkansas, address scope-of-practice issues and reduce the stigma of substance use disorders. He also will lead AMS’ ongoing vaccine advocacy and other work related to the COVID-19 pandemic. The role is one of many examples of Dr. Wilkerson’s service and leadership in Arkansas and beyond, in addition to his outstanding work on our faculty since 2000. He was also recently reelected by his colleagues in the Arkansas Society of Anesthesiologists to serve as the Arkansas Director on the American Society of Anesthesiologists Board of Directors.

Genetic Sequencing Policy Update
Dr. Kent McKelvey
, Associate Professor of Family Medicine and Genetics, contributed to a major new article in Nature, Genetics in Medicine that is receiving international attention. Dr. McKelvey serves on the American College of Medical Genetics (ACMG) Secondary Findings Committee, which reviews genes for inclusion or exclusion on clinical exomes and substantially impacts what molecular data labs report out when exome sequencing – sequencing of the small fraction of the genome that contains all of the protein coding genes – is performed. “ACMG SF v3.0 list for reporting of secondary findings in clinical exome and genome sequencing: a policy statement of the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics (ACMG)” can be read here. Thank you, Dr. McKelvey, for serving in this important national role in the field of genetics.

Outstanding in Orthopaedics
Congratulations to the Department of Orthopaedic Surgery on a slate of recent accomplishments, including receiving the Joint Replacement Excellence Award from Healthgrades. The award recognizes UAMS as among the top 10% in the nation for quality and safety relating to joint replacement surgery. It was presented last week to Dr. Steppe Mette, senior vice chancellor for UAMS Health and CEO of UAMS Medical Center, Orthopaedic Surgery Chair Dr. Lowry Barnes, and orthopaedic surgeons Dr. Simon Mears, Dr. Jeffrey Stambough and Dr. Ben Stronach. Read more here.

Meanwhile, Dr. Jeffrey Stambough has been named Chair of the Young Physicians Committee (YPC) of the American Joint Replacement Registry (AJRR). He will lend his expertise, passion for mentoring young physicians, and fervent involvement in research through the AJJR to the YPC as it works to shape the growth and strength of the registry. AJJR operates under the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons and is the preeminent registry of its kind, capturing the details and outcomes of more than 40% of all total hip and knee replacements in the country.

A shout-out also to Dr. Ramon Ylanan, who was a co-winner of the Southeastern Conference’s Michael L. Slive Distinguished Service Award for his work as a University of Arkansas team physician serving on the SEC’s Return to Activity and Medical Guidance Task Force. Dr. Ylanan and physicians for other SEC teams were honored for developing policies and protocols to support a healthy and safe return to intercollegiate athletics competition during the pandemic.

National Service in Pathology
Department of Pathology faculty members are doing a great job in national service roles as well as in their work here in Arkansas. Most recently, Dr. Eric Rosenbaum, Director of Clinical Microbiology at both UAMS and Arkansas Children’s Hospital, assembled and led a laboratory inspection peer-review team for the College of American Pathologists (CAP) accreditation program, the gold standard for clinical laboratories. The team, which also included UAMS Cytopathology fellow Dr. Ryan Campbell, earned an excellent evaluation for their inspection of a laboratory in Texas.

Kudos as well to Dr. Tina Ipe, Director of the UAMS Blood Bank and Transfusion Division, for her contributions as a member of the American Society for Apheresis Public Affairs and Advocacy Committee on a guidebook to help peer therapeutic apheresis programs around the country ensure accurate billing and appropriate reimbursement for the important services they provide to patients.

Cancer Testing Innovation
Congratulations to Dr. Donald Johann, Associate Professor of Biomedical Informatics and Internal Medicine, who is among the national leaders from academia, industry, the National Institutes of Health and the Food and Drug Administration to co-author an important new paper  in the high-impact journal Genome Biology. The paper concerns the establishment of a new genomic reference sample to be used in creating advanced Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) assays for small to large oncopanels and liquid biopsies. Studies focusing on this aspect of translational science don’t tend to grab headlines, but they are foundational to valid testing and the future benefit of cancer patients. UAMS is involved in national efforts to bring liquid biopsy and other types of advanced NGS assays to the clinic for our patients – and this work is important in our efforts to achieve National Cancer Institute (NCI) designation.

Scholarships Matter
Hundreds of College of Medicine students have benefited over the decades from the generosity of the late Dorothy Snider Surles, a Manila, Arkansas, native who later lived in Memphis. This year, we reached a milestone with more than $2.5 million in cumulative scholarship funding from the Dorothy Snider Foundation. Combined with matching funds from the college, these scholarships have now surpassed $5 million. Assistant Dean for Admissions Tom South has expertly shepherded this process since joining UAMS in 1984, working with the Dorothy Snider Foundation, our scholarships selection committee, and UAMS Institutional Advancement to ensure the continuity of this important funding and that outstanding students receive the scholarships. I join with Executive Associate Dean for Academic Affairs Dr. James Graham in expressing gratitude to the Dorothy Snider Foundation and to Tom, his team, and all at UAMS who have made this possible.

Multicenter Study
Dr. Hannah Baer Wilkins
, an Assistant Professor of Pediatrics in the Section of Pediatric Emergency Medicine, Pharmacology and Toxicology, and Dr. Lindsay Arthur, a graduating Pediatric Cardiology fellow and upcoming inaugural Pediatric Advanced Cardiac Imaging fellow, did  a great job on in important multicenter study. They are among the authors of “Rheumatic Heart Disease in the United States: Forgotten But not Gone-Results of a 10-Year Multicenter Review,” which has been accepted for publication in the Journal of the American Heart Association.

ASTROnomical Potential
2020 UAMS graduate Dr. Scarlett Acklin is on a trajectory for great success as a radiation oncologist. After wrapping up her internship at UAMS, she begins her radiation oncology residency at Duke University next month. And she has just been awarded the Basic/Translational Science Abstract Award in the Radiation and Cancer Biology category from the American Society for Radiation Oncology (ASTRO). Her abstract was one of only 30 selected from more than 2,000 submitted. She is also invited for an oral presentation of her research, “SIRT2 promotes murine melanoma progression through natural killer cell inhibition,” at the ASTRO annual meeting in October. Dr. Acklin started her adventure of cancer research in Radiation Oncology Chair Dr. Fen Xia’s laboratory when she was a first-year medical student. She went on to win a research award, have four invited oral presentations at national and international cancer research meetings, and produce four papers including one in the Journal of Clinical Investigation and two as first author. I join with Dr. Xia and her team in congratulating Dr. Acklin!

Above & Beyond
A recent patient in the Medical Intensive Care Unit experienced the very best of UAMS, thanks to the MICU team, Neurology colleagues and others who helped to get to the bottom of a condition that is often misdiagnosed. Just as noteworthy was the kindness of first-year Internal Medicine resident Dr. Tanya Savenka. Second-year resident Dr. Lana Abusalem told us about the case, saying it reminded her of why she wanted to go into medicine. Dr. Savenka had gone out of her way to obtain a great history, establish rapport with the patient’s mother and check back on the patient after she had been transferred to another service. She even gave the mother a book about another patient’s experience with the same disease, to let her know her daughter was not alone.

“I was very impressed by how caring, thoughtful and compassionate Dr. Savenka is,” said Dr. Abusalem. “I was reminded of how vulnerable our patients and their families feel when they are sick and alone in the hospital, and that small gestures like this can go a long way to make them feel seen.”

Filed Under: Accolades

Accolades – June 9, 2021

Here are this week’s Accolades, a roundup of some of the honors and accomplishments of College of Medicine and UAMS faculty, staff, residents, fellows and students I’ve heard about recently!

National Leadership
Congratulations to Dr. José Romero, Professor of Pediatrics, on his appointment to the American Academy of Pediatrics Committee on Infectious Diseases. The appointment is the latest example of Dr. Romero’s exemplary service as a state and national leader in public health policy relating to infectious diseases. Dr. Romero has been instrumental in Arkansas’ response to the pandemic in his roles as Arkansas Secretary of Health and Director of the Arkansas Department of Health. At the national level, he has helped to guide the safe rollout of COVID-19 vaccines as Chair of the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices.

Commission Appointment
Congratulations to Dr. Manisha Singh, Associate Professor in the Division of Nephrology and Director of the Home Dialysis Program, on her appointment to the Arkansas Kidney Disease Commission by Governor Asa Hutchinson. The appointment reflects Dr. Singh’s longstanding dedication to Arkansans with kidney disease, including her work in education for rural and underserved Arkansans to help them implement lifestyle modifications to slow the progression of the disease. The commission provides financial support for life-saving care and treatment for Arkansans in need.

Excelling in MFM
The Division of Maternal-Fetal Medicine has excelled in training fellows and generating collaborative scholarly work since 2011, when the MFM Fellowship was founded by Dr. Everett “Pat” Magann, Professor and Division Director. I enjoyed learning about some of the program’s accomplishments, along with many others from the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, at a recent faculty meeting. The three-year fellowship has maintained a remarkable 100% first-time pass rate by all of its graduates to date on both the written and oral MFM board exams. The MFM Division also has had a fantastic year for publications, with 21 listed in PUBMED in June 2020-May 2021. Click here for a look at the publications and the many current and former faculty, residents, fellows and students who contributed.

Section Editor
Dr. Manish Joshi
, a Professor in the Pulmonary and Critical Care Division of the Department of Internal Medicine, edited a recent issue of Current Opinion in Pulmonary Medicine. He has served as a section editor for the annual issue of the journal that focuses on obstructive, occupational and environmental lung diseases for the past five years and has been invited to serve for the 2022 issue as well. Dr. Joshi was also the first author on a review article in the issue, “Unprecedented: the toxic synergism of Covid-19 and climate change.” Coauthors were Pulmonary and Critical Care colleagues Dr. Thaddeus Bartter, Professor, and Dr. Jose Caceres, Assistant Professor, along with fellows Dr. Sarenthia Epps and Dr. Steven Ko.

Above & Beyond
In a time of unimaginable pain and grief, an obstetric patient found transformation thanks to the incredible team in the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology and Labor & Delivery. “I did not expect to be treated with such respect and dignity,” began a letter from a patient who lost her baby, but found healing. The letter went on to describe the kind and thoughtful actions of many team members, including nurses Becky Sartini, Amy Brooks, LaSharon Tubbs and Jennifer Divino, and second-year resident Dr. Tucker Doiron. This is a story of compassion and dedication. It’s a story of why we are in medicine. I join with Dr. Nirvana Manning, Chair of OB/GYN and Director of the Women and Infants Service Line, in thanking this wonderful team. I hope you will take a moment to read this extraordinary letter.

Filed Under: Accolades

Accolades – June 2, 2021

Greetings, colleagues!

I am very pleased to continue the tradition of sharing Accolades with you each week. I have been reading Accolades over the past couple of months, and it has been a joy to learn about some of the great things College of Medicine team members are doing. Here are some of the honors and accomplishments of faculty, staff, residents, fellows and students I’ve heard about recently! – Susan S. Smyth, M.D., Ph.D., Executive Vice Chancellor and Dean

Newly Invested Colleagues
Congratulations to Pediatrics faculty members Dr. Elizabeth Sellars and Dr. Jessica Snowden on their investitures in endowed chairs at Arkansas Children’s last Thursday.

Dr. Sellars, Section Chief of Genetics and Metabolism, was the recipient of the Committee for the Future Endowed Chair in Genetics. Among other leadership roles, she serves as Medical Director of the INSTEP Clinic for children with differences in sexual differentiation and development, Co-Medical Director for the Neurofibromatosis Clinic at Arkansas Children’s Hospital (ACH), Co-Director of the UAMS Genetic Counseling Master’s Program, and Medical Director of the Arkansas Reproductive Health Monitoring System.

Dr. Snowden, Chief of the Division of Pediatric Infectious Diseases, was invested in the Horace C. Cabe Distinguished Chair for Infectious Diseases. Her leadership roles include Vice Chair for Research in the Department of Pediatrics and Co-Principal Investigator of the IDeA States Pediatric Clinical Trials Network Data Coordinating and Operations Center, which directs clinical operations for trial implementation and professional development across a 17-state NIH-funded research group.

Watch the virtual ceremony here, and learn more about Dr. Sellars, Dr. Snowden and the philanthropists who made these endowed chairs possible in the ceremony program.

Public Service Award
Congratulations to Dr. Jerrilyn Jones, Associate Professor of Emergency Medicine, on being selected to receive the Arkansas First Lady’s Woman in Public Service Award from the Women’s Foundation of Arkansas (WFA). Dr. Jones’ longstanding dedication to public service has been front and center during the pandemic. She serves as Medical Director for Preparedness and Response at the Arkansas Department of Health and was named to the Governor’s Medical Advisory Group for Post-Peak COVID-19 Response and the Winter Task Force. Dr. Jones will be one of three women honored at the WFA Power of the Purse Luncheon on September 22. You can read more about Dr. Jones in the latest issue of Little Rock Soiree magazine.

Team Publication
Department of Radiology faculty, residents and fellows contributed substantially to a special issue of Pediatric Radiology focused on child abuse imaging. Professor and Chair Dr. Arabinda Choudhary, who is internationally recognized for his expertise in pediatric neuroimaging and imaging related to pediatric abusive head trauma, served as Co-Editor, and UAMS authors collaborated on nearly a third of the 32 articles. Congratulations to Drs. George Vilanilam, Rangarajan Purushothaman, Iqbal Haq, Flavio Garcia-Pires, James Sorensen, Shivang Desai, Sateesh Jayappa and Raghu Ramakrishnaiah on this impressive and important work.

Maternal Disparities
Dr. Nirvana Manning, Chair of Obstetrics and Gynecology and Director of the Women and Infants Service Line, did a great job as a panelist for a “Conversations on Health Equity” event hosted by the Clinton Presidential Center on May 25. Dr. Manning and other experts discussed policies and systems that impact the reproductive health care of marginalized women, as well as resources to help ensure good health for women and their babies before, during and after pregnancy. A recording of the virtual discussion is available here.

Stress & Meth
Dr. Michael Wilson
, Assistant Professor of Emergency Medicine, is leading the first ever study of its kind to better understand meth addiction and the stress of an Emergency Department visit experienced by a meth user. Dr. Wilson’s novel study will use simulation to model such stress. The project, which was featured in this KATV news report, is the latest example of Dr. Wilson’s outstanding research into diverse aspects of psychiatric emergencies.

Cardiovascular Health & Longevity
The Class of 2021’s Dr. Brandi Mize is first author on an article published in SAGE Gerontology and Geriatric Medicine, “Cardiovascular Health in Individuals with Exceptional Longevity Residing in Arkansas.” Dr. Mize will begin a vascular surgery residency at Emory University School of Medicine in Atlanta this summer. Dr. Brandon Duke, a 2020 graduate currently completing his family medicine residency at the University of Alabama Tuscaloosa College of Community Health Sciences, is a coauthor. Their mentors and collaborators in the Donald W. Reynolds Institute on Aging included Research Associate Amanda Pangle, Dr. Jeanne Wei, Professor, Chair of Geriatrics and Institute Director, and Geriatrics Professor Dr. Gohar Azhar, who served as senior author.

Scholarly Collaborations
2021 UAMS graduate Dr. Muhammad Abu-Rmaileh and 2020 graduate Dr. Santiago Gonzalez are first authors of separate studies resulting from collaborations with Dr. James Yuen, Chief of the Division of Plastic Surgery, and others. Dr. Abu-Rmaileh’s article, a timely review of live-streaming technologies in surgery, has been accepted for publication in the Annals of Plastic Surgery. Dr. Abu-Rmaileh will start his internal medicine residency at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical School in Dallas this summer. Dr. Gonzalez and third-year resident Dr. Tamara Osborn also were collaborators. Dr. Gonzalez, who is completing his plastic surgery residency at the University of California San Francisco, is first author on “Self-development Tools Utilized by Plastic Surgeons: A Survey of ASPS (American Society of Plastic Surgeons) Members,” published in PRS Global Open. Former faculty member Dr. Michael Golinko, now at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, is also among the collaborators.  

Cardiology Mentorship
Mentorship and collaboration among Cardiovascular Medicine faculty, fellows and residents continue to result in publications on timely issues such as treatment of COVID-19 complications. Dr. Khalid Sawalha, a resident with the White River Health System Internal Medicine Residency Program in Batesville who rotated with the UAMS team, has had two case reports accepted for publication. The latest is “Theophylline in Treatment of COVID-10 Induced Sinus Bradycardia,” in Clinics and Practice. Coauthors included Chief Cardiology Fellow Dr. Fuad Habash, Associate Professor Dr. Srikanth Vallurupalli and Professor Dr. Hakan Paydak, senior author on the study.

Filed Under: Accolades

Christopher Smith, M.D., Returns to UAMS, Arkansas Children’s

Christopher Smith, M.D., has rejoined the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) and Arkansas Children’s as professor and vice chair for primary care in the UAMS College of Medicine Department of Pediatrics and primary care service line director and medical director of ambulatory primary care services at Arkansas Children’s Hospital (ACH).

Dr. Christopher E. Smith
Christopher E. Smith, M.D., has rejoined UAMS and Arkansas Children’s as a faculty member and pediatric primary care leader.

Smith previously served UAMS and Arkansas Children’s in numerous leadership roles from 1989 to 2016, including as regional associate dean for the College of Medicine at the UAMS Northwest Campus in Fayetteville in 2011-2016. From 2016 until his return to UAMS, he was a professor and the Daniel C. Plunket Chair of the Department of Pediatrics at the University of Oklahoma School of Community Medicine in Tulsa, Oklahoma.

Smith received his medical degree from the University of Mississippi in 1983 and came to UAMS for his internship and pediatrics residency. He spent three years in private practice in Clinton, Mississippi before joining the UAMS Department of Pediatrics faculty in 1989.

Smith served as associate director of the Pediatrics Residency during his first three years as a faculty member and then directed the program from 1992 to1997, when he was appointed vice chair for education in the department. Smith served for 12 years on the UAMS Graduate Medical Education Committee, including four years as chair.

As an educator, Smith has received numerous honors, including the 2008-2009 UAMS Chancellor’s Faculty Teaching Award, the 2009 College of Medicine Master Teacher Award, and numerous student-selected Red Sash Awards.

Smith’s clinical leadership roles at ACH included developing and serving as director of the Pediatric Hospitalist Service from 2003 to 2010. He also served as medical director of the ACH Express Care Unit in 2004-2009 and as associate medical director for the hospital in 2005-2011.

As regional associate dean for the College of Medicine from 2011 to 2016, Smith oversaw much of the initial growth of the medical education program at the UAMS Northwest campus. Among many initiatives, he worked with students and leaders of UAMS’ Pharmacy, Nursing and Health Professions colleges in the region to develop interprofessional educational experiences. While chair of pediatrics at the University of Oklahoma School of Community Medicine, Smith emphasized faculty development and promotion, and student, resident and faculty scholarly work. Under his leadership, the department developed a research infrastructure that led to more than doubling of the publications produced by the department while continuing as the largest provider of care in the state for children insured by Medicaid.

Filed Under: College of Medicine

Timothy Langford, M.D., Appointed as Next Chair of Urology at UAMS

Timothy Langford, M.D., a Little Rock urologic surgeon with nearly three decades of experience, has been appointed chair of the Department of Urology in the College of Medicine at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS), effective Oct. 3.

Timothy Langford, M.D., a leader in urologic surgery in Arkansas and the region, is joining UAMS as chair of Urology in October.

Langford succeeds current Chair Rodney Davis, M.D., who is retiring after serving in the post since 2012.

“Dr. Langford is a highly regarded urologic surgeon and leader in the field in Arkansas and regionally,” said Christopher T. Westfall, M.D., executive vice chancellor of UAMS and dean of the College of Medicine. “He brings superb experience in urologic surgery and clinical leadership to UAMS.”

Langford has practiced throughout his 28-year career at Arkansas Urology, P.A., where he served as president from 2011 to January of this year.

A 1988 graduate of the UAMS College of Medicine, Langford stayed at UAMS for his general surgery internship and residency training in general surgery followed by his urology residency. He served as chief resident in urology before joining Arkansas Urology in 1993. In addition to his leadership of Arkansas Urology, he was chief of staff at Baptist Health-Little Rock in 2014-2015. Langford is certified by the American Board of Urology and is active in national and regional professional organizations including the American Urologic Association, the American Association of Clinical Urologists and the Arkansas Urological Society, for which he served as president in 2002. He also has held leadership roles in the South Central Section of the American Urological Association (SCA/AUA) including a term as president in 2018.

Filed Under: College of Medicine

Accolades – May 26, 2021

Here are this week’s Accolades, a roundup of some of the honors and accomplishments of College of Medicine and UAMS faculty, staff, residents, fellows and students I’ve heard about recently!

National Example
The Cancer Imaging Archive (TCIA), a UAMS-housed public database funded by the National Cancer Institute (NCI) and led by Biomedical Informatics Chair Dr. Fred Prior, was recognized recently as a prime example of a High-Value Data Asset (HVDA) for national research. The recognition stemmed from a new National Institutes of Health (NIH) working group that has been charged with building a framework to ensure the sustainability of HVDA across the NIH. The program manager for TCIA at the NCI relayed the good news to Dr. Prior, emphasizing that it reflected the excellent work and contributions of the UAMS team. Kudos to Dr. Prior and his colleagues on the TCIA: Drs. Jonathan Bona, Mathias Brochhausen and Lawrence Tarbox, Instructors Tracy Nolan, Kirk Smith and William Bennett, Project Manager Roosevelt Dobbins and the entire TCIA staff.

Leadership Fellow
Congratulations to Dr. Matt Quick, Associate Professor of Pathology, on being selected for the highly competitive Association of Pathology Chairs Leadership Fellows Program. He is one of only 25 pathologists nationwide to be chosen for the new program, which cultivates leadership potential and opportunities by providing experiences and education to accelerate understanding and competency in academic administration skills. At UAMS, Dr. Quick serves as Vice-Chair for Anatomic Pathology, Co-Course Director for the Musculoskeletal and Reproduction & Endocrinology modules in the medical curriculum, and an Academic House Advisor. He has been approved for promotion to Professor on July 1. 

Tomorrow’s Researchers
Bench-to-Bedside research in infectious disease was the timely topic of a virtual workshop for undergraduates hosted by Arkansas INBRE (IDeA Networks of Biomedical Research Excellence). INBRE, which is directed by the Department of Physiology and Cell Biology’s Dr. Larry Cornett, sponsored the event for Arkansas college students who are interested in careers in medicine and biomedical research. Dr. Tom Kelly of the Department of Pathology did a great job organizing the workshop, and many faculty members lent their expertise to clinical case discussions, interactive sessions on infectious disease topics, and a panel discussion focused on aspects of COVID-19.

I join with Dr. Cornett and Dr. Kelly in thanking these colleagues: Drs. Juan Carlos Rico and Robert Bradsher in Internal Medicine; Dr. Amanda Novack (UAMS/Baptist Health); Drs. Karl Boehme, Roger Pechous, Jon Blevins and Mark Smeltzer in Microbiology and Immunology; Dr. Samantha Kendrick in Biochemistry and Molecular Biology; Dr. David Ussery in Biomedical Informatics; and Dr. Bobby Boyanton in Pathology.

ECMO Excellence
UAMS completed its first ECMO course of treatment this week, helping a COVID-19 patient overcome a very dire situation. ECMO (extracorporeal membrane oxygenation) life-support technology allows the heart and lungs of a patient to rest and heal over weeks or months. Implementing ECMO care at UAMS was a big team effort that took many months of hard work. I join with Department of Surgery Chair Dr. Ron Robertson and Cardiovascular Medicine Division Chief Dr. Paul Mounsey in expressing gratitude to all who made this initiative – and this remarkable patient success story – possible. Special thanks to Dr. Ben Davis, Carmen Eaken, RN, Allison Lord, MNSc, RN, CCRN, Shawn Welch, Dr. Julius Balogh and Dr. Jay Bhama.

Student Published
Congratulations to rising junior medical student Sarah E. “Liza” Hill on the publication of her article in the American Journal of Surgery. Ms. Hill is the first author on “National Readmissions Database characterization of post-cholecystectomy care for inpatients: Readmissions and bile duct repair.” Co-authors included her primary mentor on the project, the Department of Surgery’s Dr. Lyle Burdine, along with Surgery faculty Drs. Hanna Jensen, Kevin Sexton, Kyle Kalkwarf and Emmanouil Giorgakis, and graduate assistant Rebecca Reif, M.H.A., and Dr. Saleema Karim of the College of Public Health. The study analyzed and compared readmission and other complications for patients who had either laparoscopic or open cholecystectomy (gallbladder removal).

Anesthesia Study
A shout-out to Dr. Muhammad Athar, Assistant Professor of Anesthesiology, on his new article in the International Journal of Obstetric Anesthesia. Dr. Athar is the first author on “An observational pilot study of a novel loss of resistance syringe for locating the epidural space.” He collaborated on the study with colleagues at Stanford University School of Medicine while completing a fellowship in obstetric anesthesia prior to joining UAMS last year.

Wellness Champion
A colleague recently emailed me to express gratitude for Dr. Puru Thapa, Professor of Psychiatry and Director of Faculty Wellness. The faculty member has referred several colleagues for help with various struggles, and was not surprised to learn that all were treated with exceptional compassion and respect. “Dr. Thapa is invariably a kind, thoughtful, reflective listener and always seems to help faculty put things into perspective,” she wrote. “Dr. Thapa is an institutional treasure, and we are so lucky to have him.” I couldn’t agree more!

For an overview of some of the wellness resources available to UAMS faculty, residents, students and employees, click here.

An Accolade for YOU
When I launched Accolades in the fall of 2018, I saw it as an opportunity to pass along some of the many great things I was hearing about College of Medicine team members every day. I also knew that sometimes a pat on the back for hard work well done is just what is needed to inspire us to get up the next day and do it all over again. I have been amazed at – and certainly inspired by – the stories, honors and accomplishments you have shared with me during my time as Dean.

Next week, we welcome your new Dean, Dr. Susan Smyth, to UAMS. I know she, too, will enjoy hearing and passing along good news about the College of Medicine family. So please do keep those accolades coming!

Thank you for your service to our college and those we serve. Thank you for your extraordinary collegiality. It really is what makes the College of Medicine and UAMS so special.

Filed Under: Accolades

Accolades – May 19, 2021

Here are this week’s Accolades, a roundup of some of the honors and accomplishments of College of Medicine and UAMS faculty, staff, residents, fellows and students I’ve heard about recently!

Rising Star in Research
Congratulations to Dr. Taren Swindle, Assistant Professor in Family and Preventive Medicine, on being selected as the 2021 recipient of the Norman Kretchmer Award in Nutrition and Development from the American Society for Nutrition (ASN). Dr. Swindle will be recognized at the ASN’s Nutrition 2021 virtual conference in June. The Kretchmer Award is given to a young investigator for a substantial body of independent research in the field of nutrition and development with potential to improve child health. At UAMS, Dr. Swindle is being promoted to Associate Professor effective July 1.

Award-Winning Research
Congratulations to the Department of Anesthesiology’s Dr. Nadir El Sharawi, Assistant Professor, and Dr. Jill Mhyre, Professor and Chair, on their tied first-place finish in the Gertie Marx Research Competition at the Society for Obstetric Anesthesia and Perinatology annual meeting for a study titled “The ED90 of Intrathecal Chloroprocaine for Cervival Cerclage Placement: An Up-Down Sequential Allocation Dose-Response Study.” This multicenter study was completed with colleagues at Duke University, including Dr. Cameron Taylor, a 2018 graduate of the UAMS Anesthesiology Residency.

Resident Published
Fourth-year Medicine-Pediatrics resident Dr. Emily Sanders is the lead author on a paper accepted for publication in the Journal of Pediatrics. “Cardiac Manifestation among Children with Hemolytic Uremic Syndrome” identified differences in in-hospital mortality based on the type of cardiac manifestations, with increased risk observed for patients with multiple cardiac involvement, cardiac arrest, and extracorporeal membrane oxygenation deployments. Co-authors included the College of Public Health’s Dr. Clare Brown; Dr. Richard Blaszak and Dr. Brendan Crawford in Pediatric Nephrology; and Dr. Parthak Prodhan in Pediatric Cardiology – Dr. Sanders’ primary mentor on this research. Dr. Sanders will begin a Pediatric Cardiology fellowship at UAMS/Arkansas Children’s this summer.

Geriatrics Presenters
Department of Geriatrics faculty, staff and fellows did a great job at the American Geriatrics Society annual conference last week. Geriatrics fellows Drs. Elizabeth Eoff, Jametria Howard-Jones and Shami Nandy all presented posters. Their mentors were Professor and Chair Dr. Jeanne Wei and Professors Dr. Gohar Azhar and Dr. Priya Mendiratta, Fellowship Program Director. Dr. Mendiratta and the College of Nursing’s Dr. Pam deGravelles were session presenters for “Using an Integrated Approach to Geriatrics Fellowship.” Other collaborators were Associate Professor Dr. Denise Compton, Dr. Wei, Dr. Azhar, Fellowship Coordinator Joni Pharis, Education Coordinator Patty Summons, and the Simulation Center team. The Geriatrics education team also was involved in mentoring early-career geriatricians and poster-judging during the meeting.

EM Consultant of the Month
Congratulations to Dr. Ramez Awad, Assistant Professor in the Hospital Medicine Division of the Department of Internal Medicine, on being the first attending physician selected by Emergency Medicine residents as their Consultant of the Month. Residents honored Dr. Awad for “treating patient care like a TEAM SPORT with patient well-being as the top priority.” They appreciated Dr. Awad for following up with them on outcomes stemming from their diagnoses, to help them learn from those cases, and much more. A shout-out also to graduating EM resident Dr. Laura Werline, who has overseen the monthly honor since its inception a year and a half ago. Many residents from other specialties have been honored, and now a stellar faculty member!

Book Chapter
Dr. Faiza A. Khan, Associate Professor of Anesthesiology, and Dr. Jill Mhyre, Professor and Chair, authored a chapter on Obstetric Hemorrhage in the newly published book “Obstetric Anesthesia Practice,” edited by Alan Kaye and Richard Urman and published by Oxford University Press. Congratulations.

National Committee
Dr. James C. Yuen
, Professor and Chief of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, has been reappointed to an additional term on the American Board of Surgery-General Surgery Certifying Exam Consultant Committee in Skin and Soft Tissue. Dr. Yuen has shared his expertise on the committee since 2017.

Best of the Best
I was delighted to hear that two of our colleagues, Dr. Sarah Cobb and Ebonye Green, APRN, were honored in AY Magazine’s Best of 2021 list. Dr. Cobb, an Assistant Professor in the Neurology Division of the Department of Pediatrics, was voted best neurologist by AY readers across the state. Ms. Green, APRN for the Department of Neurosurgery and Lead Advanced Practice Provider for the Inpatient Neuroscience Service Line, was voted best nurse practitioner. Way to go!

Life-Saving Dedication
An attending transplant surgeon sent me a fantastic example of what makes our surgical residents so amazing. One recent night, second-year General Surgery resident Dr. Sarah Martin completed a non-surgical procedure to facilitate life-saving nephrology care for a transplant patient while also caring for three Level-1 trauma cases. “Heroisms like this happen every single day and night in our service,” the faculty member said. “UAMS surgical residents seamlessly go far above and beyond to cover patients’ needs, no matter if surgical, nephrology or hepatology-related. They willingly step in to ensure the very best care for extremely complex and often very sick patients; and all this despite their otherwise hectic surgical residency duties.”

Honoring our Colleagues
Finally this week, I want to congratulate our many College of Medicine team members who were honored for their excellence as part of annual ceremonies such as Honors Convocation and Dean’s Honor Day, and in annual traditions such as the Chancellor’s Teaching Awards and our college’s Red Sash and Gold Sash recognitions.

The Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology’s Dr. Sung Rhee received the Chancellor’s Award for Teaching Excellence. And at Honors Convocation, Dr. Rhee received the Sophomore (M2) Golden Apple Award for the sixth consecutive year.

This year’s other outstanding Golden Apple Awards recipients are: M1: Dr. Alan Diekman (Biochemistry/Molecular Biology); M3: Dr. Nicholas Gowen (Internal Medicine); and M4: Dr. Lindsey Sward (Obstetrics and Gynecology). This is the eighth consecutive Golden Apple for Dr. Diekman. Dr. Sward has received Golden Apples from either the junior or senior class for four straight years, and seniors chose her to deliver the faculty address at Honors Convocation for the second year in a row.

College of Medicine seniors chose fourth-year Child Neurology resident Dr. Paul Drake as the Resident of the Year.

I was profoundly moved by the kind words of appreciation for my service from Dr. Stephanie Gardner, Dr. Erick Messias and others at our Dean’s Honor Day Ceremony this Monday. It has been my honor to serve at UAMS for the past 23 years.

It was equally gratifying to watch the video tributes to our faculty who are receiving promotions in rank this year and to hear the enthusiastic, heartfelt presentations to 15 of our award-winning colleagues from their nominators during the ceremony.

Watch for the ceremony video and stories about our honorees in the May issue of the COMmunication and on the UAMS and COM websites next week. For now, I want to take this opportunity to congratulate:

Staff Awards Recipients: Bailey Snellgrove, B.A.; Aaron D. Warren, B.A.; Laura Jones, APRN; Shannon Giger, M.H.A.

Faculty Honorees in Education: Dr. Sara Tariq and Dr. Riley Lipschitz; and in Research: Dr. Tamara Perry

Residency Educator Award winners: Dr. Alice Alexander and Wyvonne Ora, B.S.

Clinical Excellence Award Recipients: Drs. Hunter Gibbs, Elena Ambrogini, Benjamin Tharian, Benjamin Davis, Zachary Lewis and Jon Rubenow

Last but not least, I know you will all join me in congratulating the College of Medicine Class of 2021 on their many accomplishments!

Filed Under: Accolades

Accolades – May 12, 2021

Here are this week’s Accolades, a roundup of some of the honors and accomplishments of College of Medicine and UAMS faculty, staff, residents, fellows and students I’ve heard about recently!

National Research Award
Congratulations to Dr. Spyridoula Maraka, Assistant Professor in the Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism, on receiving the Women Advancing Thyroid Research Award from the American Thyroid Association. Dr. Maraka was recognized for her expertise in hypothyroidism in pregnancy and subclinical hypothyroidism in older adults, and specifically for her article, “Clinical Outcomes after Discontinuation of Thyroid Hormone Replacement: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis,” published in Thyroid.

Scholarly Teamwork
Excellent teamwork among College of Medicine faculty, fellows, residents and senior medical students in Dr. Hakan Paydak’s ECG Reading and Arrhythmias Course has resulted in a new publication in the Journal of Electrocardiology. Dr. Michael Cross, a Chief Resident in Internal Medicine, was the first author and Dr. Paydak, Professor and Director of the Clinical Cardiac Electrophysiology Fellowship, served as senior author on “The sensitivity of graphic trends in differentiating sinus and supraventricular tachycardia.” Collaborators included Dr. Sarah Floyd of the Division of Hospital Medicine; Division of Cardiology faculty members Dr. Subodh Devabhaktuni and Dr. Srikanth Vallurupalli; Chief Cardiovascular Diseases Fellow Dr. Fuad Habash; and former fellows Dr. Kanishk Agnihotri and Dr. Abhishek Deshmukh.

Pathology Publications
Congratulations to Dr. Neriman Gokden, Professor of Pathology, on the publication of two new original articles. She is a co-author with colleagues around the country on a paper, “Distal tubular hyperplasia: a proposal for a unique form of renal tubular proliferation distinct from papillary adenoma,” which was published in the American Journal of Surgical Pathology. Dr. Gokden collaborated with a team at Arkana Laboratories in Little Rock on an article, “Appearances can be deceiving: Viral-like inclusions in COVID-19 negative renal biopsies by electron microscopy,” which was published in Kidney360.

Book Chapter
A shout-out to Assistant Professor Dr. Neeraj Kumar, Associate Professor Dr. Priya Gupta and Professor Dr. Indranil Chakraborty on the publication of their book chapter. The Department of Anesthesiology colleagues collaborated on “Airway Devices for Thoracic Anesthesia and Ventilatory Techniques,” which is featured in the book “Thoracic Anesthesia Procedures,” edited by Drs. Alan D. Kaye and Richard D. Urman and published by Oxford University Press.

Dermatology Presenters
UAMS was well represented at the annual meetings of the International Society for Cutaneous Lymphomas (ISCL) and the Society for Investigative Dermatology (SID). Dr. Katelynn Campbell, a dermatopathologist and Assistant Professor of Pathology, Dr. Henry Wong, Professor of Dermatology, and second-year medical students Sophia Ly and Delice Kayishunge had a case presentation, “Heterogenous Clinical Phenotype of Primary cutaneous gamma/delta T-cell lymphoma after treatment,” highlighted at the ISCL meeting. At the subsequent SID meeting, second-year Dermatology resident Dr. Jonathan Rick presented “Delays to Diagnosis: A Survey of Hidradenitis Patients; Dr. Wong, Ms. Ly and Ms. Kayishunge presented “Epidemiologic trends of mycosis fungoides and sezary syndrome in Arkansas reveals increasing incidence and disparities;” and Ms. Ly received a SID Registration Grant for her submission.

Preparing Interns
Rising Intern Preparation Week is traditionally held with in-person expert panels, advanced cardiac life support (ACLS) training and simulation education to help prepare College of Medicine seniors for life as interns. After the pandemic halted the event last year, a dedicated team of faculty and staff worked very hard to plan and conduct this important program virtually for the Class of 2021. Special thanks to Dr. Matthew Spond, Associate Professor of Anesthesiology; Dr. Karen Dickinson, Assistant Professor of Surgery and Director of Interprofessional Simulation and Clinical Skills Education; Veronica Ussery, Education Director for the Anesthesia Tech Pipeline and GME Program Coordinator for Anesthesiology; and Sherry Johnson of the Simulation Center. Many others from Anesthesiology, Emergency Medicine, Surgery, Cardiology, Neurology, Orthopaedic Surgery, the Centers for Simulation Education, COM Housestaff Office and other UAMS areas contributed to this effort. Hats off to you all!

ER Excellence
When two Little Rock police officers were injured in a major vehicle collision recently – one of them seriously – they received outstanding care in the UAMS Emergency Department. As it happens, a parent of the officer who was most seriously injured is a College of Medicine faculty member. “We greatly appreciate all the care both officers received in the UAMS ER that night,” the colleague said in a thank you note. “Several officers who were at the ER to check on those injured and offer support expressed to me their appreciation and trust in the UAMS ER and indicated that is where they would wish to be taken if anything were to happen to them.” I would like to echo this gratitude for the always-exceptional care provided by the Emergency Medicine team.

Above & Beyond
Imagine being new parents and having a serendipitous move to Arkansas – along with the remarkable efforts of a UAMS physician – save your baby’s life. Dr. Kapil Arya, an Associate Professor in the Department of Pediatrics Division of Neurology, used the training he received as a UAMS Translational Research Institute/UAMS Center for Implementation Research Implementation Science Scholar to rapidly establish statewide newborn screenings for spinal muscular atrophy (SMA), a rare, disabling and fatal disease, following the enactment of an Arkansas law calling for the screenings. Read about this incredible effort in the UAMS Newsroom.

Filed Under: Accolades

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