Medicine Grand Rounds: Hot Topics and Controversies in Cardiovascular Prevention

When:
August 14, 2019 @ 8:00 am – 9:00 am
2019-08-14T08:00:00-07:00
2019-08-14T09:00:00-07:00
Where:
LKSC Berg Hall
291 Campus Drive
Palo Alto
CA 94305
Cost:
Free
Contact:
Talia Ochoa
Medicine Grand Rounds: Hot Topics and Controversies in Cardiovascular Prevention @ LKSC Berg Hall | Palo Alto | California | United States

Presenters: Fatima Rodriguez, MD, MPH and Joshua Knowles, MD, PhD

Rodriguez: Assistant Professor of Cardiovascular Medicine
Stanford University

Knowles: Assistant Professor of Cardiovascular Medicine
Stanford University

Rodriguez:

Fatima Rodriguez, MD, MPH is a preventive and general cardiologist in the Division of Cardiovascular Medicine at Stanford. Rodriguez received her medical training from Harvard Medical School. She completed her residency at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and a fellowship in Cardiovascular Medicine at Stanford University. She specializes in common cardiac conditions such as coronary artery disease, valvular heart disease, lipid disorders, and cardiovascular risk assessment in high-risk populations.

Rodriguez’s research includes a range of topics relating to racial, ethnic, and gender disparities in cardiovascular disease prevention and developing novel interventions to address disparities.

Knowles:

Josh Knowles, MD, PhD, is a physician-scientist and he states, “The overall theme of my research has been the genetic basis of cardiovascular disease across the continuum from Discovery to the development of Model Systems to the Translation of these findings to the clinic and most recently to the Public Health aspect of genetics.” He completed his MD-PhD at UNC with Prof. Nobuyo Maeda and Nobel Laureate Oliver Smithies. He did Internal Medicine residency and Cardiology fellowship training at Stanford working with Dr. Tom Quertermous. Currently his Discovery and basic translational efforts center on understanding the genetic basis of insulin resistance using GWAS studies coupled with exploration in model systems. His clinical translational focus is on Familial Hypercholesterolemia (FH) and he is the volunteer Chief Medical Advisor of the FH Foundation (FHF) which is a patient-led organization dedicated to increasing awareness of FH, identifying and treating patients with FH and screening family members to prevent deleterious outcomes. He helped lead the FHF efforts to establish a national patient registry (CASCADE FH), apply for an ICD10 code for FH and is now using cutting-edge “big-data” approaches to identify previously undiagnosed FH patients in electronic medical records (FIND FH). He has published over 90 papers with research projects currently funded by the National Institutes of Health, the American Heart Association and the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation.