Yale University School of Medicine, Department of Pediatrics.
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(203) 785-2022


Yale Pediatrics
P.O. Box 208064
New Haven, CT 06520-8064

(203) 785-4630
E-mail: pediatrics@yale.edu

   

Cardiology

James C. Perry, M.D.
Dr. Perry is the Chief of the Section of Pediatric Cardiology at Yale. He also serves as the Medical Director of the Yale-New Haven Adult Congenital Heart Program and as Director of Pediatric and Congenital Electrophysiology. Dr. Perry's clinical work focuses on these patients groups: those with arrhythmias, pacemakers, defibrillators and those with adult congenital heart disease. He performs electrophysiology studies, catheter ablation procedures including 3-dimensional mapping using the Biosense Webster CARTOä system and implantation of pacemakers and defibrillators.

Dr. Perry is Immediate Past President of the Pediatric Electrophysiology Society and serves on the Editorial Board for several prominent journals related to electrophysiology and pediatric cardiology. He is a Fellow of the American College of Cardiology, American Academy of Pediatrics and a member of Heart Rhythm Society and the Association of European Paediatric Cardiology.

Dr. Perry joined the Yale Pediatric Cardiology Section in July, 2004 after serving as Director of Pediatric Cardiology at Children's Hospital San Diego. He completed his fellowship training at Texas Children's Hospital in 1986.

Jeremy D. Asnes, M.D.
Dr. Asnes provides diagnostic and interventional cardiac catheterization services for children and adults with congenital heart disease. Procedures Dr. Asnes performs in the catheterization laboratory include atrial septal defect (ASD) and patent foramen ovale (PFO) closure, patent ductus arteriosus (PDA) closure, transcatheter treatment of aortic and pulmonary valve stenosis, transcatheter treatment of coarctation of the aorta, intravascular stent placement, and coil occlusion procedures. Dr. Asnes has extensive experience in the use of intracardiac echocardiography and is able to perform many of these procedures without the use of general anesthesia. He plans to incorporate cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) techniques into the planning of interventional procedures.

Dr. Asnes joined the Yale Pediatric Cardiology Section in July, 2005 after receiving additional training in interventional cardiac catheterization at the Cleveland Clinic Foundation.

Peter N. Bowers, M.D.
Dr. Bowers provides a broad clinical expertise for the Yale Section of Pediatric Cardiology, in outpatient and inpatient cardiology and echocardiography. His clinical practice mirrors his basic science research work, with an emphasis on care of children with left heart obstructive lesions. He is an active participant in the educational mission of the School of Medicine and serves as Co-Director of the Yale Pedaitric Cardiology Fellowship Program.

Dr. Bowers has been a staff cardiologist since completing his fellowship at Yale in 1998.

Martina Brueckner, M.D.
Dr. Brueckner's clinical focus is on patients with genetic causes of congenital heart disease. It has become increasingly apparent that a large portion of cardiovascular disease in children and adolescents has as its underlying etiology a genetic defect. Frequently, patients with a genetically caused cardiovascular defect have involvement of other systems. These patients require care from multiple subspecialists. This multi-specialty care is sometimes difficult to coordinate, and attending many separate clinics can be time consuming for the patients and their families. The Children's Hospital at Yale-New Haven created a unique joint genetics-cardiology clinic that provides comprehensive diagnostic evaluation and follow-up care for patients with genetic-cardiovascular disease. This clinic provides an organized database that permits participation in a broad range of studies on the genetic etiology of cardiovascular disease in the young. The target patient population includes patients with a known syndrome that has as one of its components cardiovascular involvement such as structural congenital heart disease, cardiomyopathies and vascular disease. This includes (but is not limited to) William, Marfan, DiGeorge, Down, Noonan and Turner syndromes. Additionally, the clinic sees patients with diagnosed or suspected cardiovascular disease and additional signs or symptoms suggestive of a syndrome. Examples are associated birth defects, growth failure not explained by the cardiovascular disease, developmental delay or dystrophic features. The clinic provides care for families who are affected by cardiovascular disease and are searching for genetic counseling. Dr. Brueckner has been a staff cardiologist since completing her fellowship at Yale in 1990.

John T. Fahey, M.D.
Dr. Fahey's major clinical focus since 1999 has been maintaining and advancing the reputation of the pediatric catheterization laboratory at Yale by introducing new techniques and devices to treat patients with congenital heart disease by interventional catheterization in order to avoid open heart surgery. The Amplatzer Septal Occluderä (ASD) closure device has been in use in the lab for three years, since its approval by the FDA. Yale's Pediatric Cardiology Section is the only center in Connecticut to have approval to use this device and one of few in the northeast. In 2003, the Amplatzer Ductal Occluderä (PDA) closure device was introduced to close large PDAs in patients who would have previously required surgery.

Dr. Fahey has been a staff cardiologist since completing his fellowship at Yale in 1984. He served as Interim Director of the Section for 6 years.

Alan H. Friedman, M.D.
Dr. Friedman's clinical interests are primarily in the diagnosis and management of the fetus and neonate with congenital heart disease. He is particularly interested in physiologic changes that occur from the fetus to the neonate and the use of non-invasive imaging techniques to assess these. He has a busy clinical practice at the Yale New Haven Children's Hospital and at the Section's satellite clinics (Brookfield).

Dr. Friedman serves as the Residency Program Director and Associate Chair of Pediatrics, overseeing the educational mission of the Department of Pediatrics at Yale. He is also on the Board of Rotary International and the Editorial Board of Prep SA for the American Academy of Pediatrics.

Dr. Friedman has been a staff cardiologist in the Yale Pediatric Cardiology since completing his fellowship training at Yale in 1994.

George A. Porter, Jr., M.D., Ph.D.
Dr. Porter's areas of clinical expertise are in general pediatric cardiology and in the management of patients with Kawasaki Disease. He assists in staffing the echocardiography laboratory. Recently, a Kawasaki Disease Program was established at Yale University to include outpatient referrals for patients with known or suspected Kawasaki Disease and participation in clinical trials for the care and treatment of patients with Kawasaki Disease. Dr. Porter is a co-investigator on a study funded by the American Heart Association to study a potential coronaviral etiology of Kawasaki Disease discovered by Jeff Kahn, M.D. from Yale's Pediatric Infectious Disease Section.

Dr. Porter has been a staff cardiologist since completing his fellowship at Yale in 2000.

Bevin Weeks, M.D.
Dr. Weeks brings a background of training and expertise in fetal, neonatal, and pediatric echocardiography, outpatient and inpatient postoperative care. Dr. Weeks' clinical activities focus on two areas: echocardiography and outpatient care. She will assist in staffing and development of the echocardiography lab. Additionally, she will be coordinating activities at Yale Pediatric Cardiology outpatient satellite offices in Greenwich, Norwalk, Brookfield and Waterbury.

Dr. Weeks recently joined the Section after completing her fellowship at Yale in 2005.

Nicole K. Boramanand, C.P.N.P.
Nicole graduated with a Masters of Science in Nursing from Yale University in 1999. Thereafter, she worked at Children's Hospital, San Diego as a pediatric nurse practitioner in pediatric cardiology. She focused her expertise on children with arrhythmia disorders (pediatric electrophysiology) and children undergoing interventional cardiac catheterization procedures. She also proposed and helped implement the region's first outpatient clinic for adult patients with congenital heart disease. In 2004, Nicole returned to Yale as the coordinator for the newly developed Yale-New Haven Adult Congenital Heart Program. This program, which also started as an outpatient clinic has expanded to serve the needs of ACH patients across hospital settings and subspecialties.

Nancy Rollinson, A.P.R.N.
Nancy has worked in the role of an R.N. in the Section for several years, with an emphasis on the catheterization laboratory, electrophysiology and pacemakers. She obtained her degree and certification as an Advanced Practice Registered Nurse from Yale in 2004 and has taken on the new role of Inpatient Coordinator for the Section of Pediatric Cardiology. In this position, she oversees further development of postoperative pathways, discharge teaching, nursing education and inpatient management of pediatric and congenital cardiology patients.