Dr. Redmond received her PhD in Cardiovascular Pharmacology from University College Dublin (UCD), Ireland. Following postdoctoral training fellowships at the University of Tennessee, Memphis, and at The Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions in Baltimore she was recruited at the level of Instructor to G...
Dr. Redmond received her PhD in Cardiovascular Pharmacology from University College Dublin (UCD), Ireland. Following postdoctoral training fellowships at the University of Tennessee, Memphis, and at The Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions in Baltimore she was recruited at the level of Instructor to Georgetown University Medical Center, Washington DC and was subsequently promoted there to Assistant Professor. Dr. Redmond joined the University of Rochester Medical Center in 1999, with a primary appointment in the Department of Surgery and a secondary appointment in the Department of Pharmacology and Physiology. Dr. Redmond was awarded tenure in March 2006.
Faculty Appointments
Professor
-
Department of Surgery, Research (SMD)
Professor
-
Department of Pharmacology and Physiology (SMD) - Joint
Credentials
Post-doctoral Training & Residency
Depts. of Anesthesiology, and of Surgery, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD 1992 - 1995
Dept. Physiology and Biophysics, University of Tennessee, Memphis, TN. 1991 - 1992
Education
PhD | University College Dublin, Ireland.Pharmacology.1991
B.Sc. (Hons) | University College Dublin, Ireland.Pharmacology.1987
Awards
Elected Fellow of the American Heart Association (FAHA).2013
Research Award Finalist.2011 - 2011
American Heart Association Grant-in-Aid Award.2005 - 2009
AHA Basic Cardiovascular Sciences Council member.2004 - 2008
ABMRF (The Foundation for Alcohol Research) Grant-in-Aid Award.1996 - 1998
NIH National Research Service Award (NRSA).1995 - 1998
AHA Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis and Vascular Biology Council member.1994 - 2008
American Heart Association Postdoctoral Fellowship.1992
NATO Bursary to attend NATO Advanced Study Institute.1990
Research
The Redmond laboratory's focus is in Vascular Biology, relating particularly to cardiovascular disease including atherosclerosis and restenosis after angioplasty. General areas of interest include (i) Notch and Hedgehog signaling in adult vasculature, (ii) the cardiovascular effects of alcohol, (iii...
The Redmond laboratory's focus is in Vascular Biology, relating particularly to cardiovascular disease including atherosclerosis and restenosis after angioplasty. General areas of interest include (i) Notch and Hedgehog signaling in adult vasculature, (ii) the cardiovascular effects of alcohol, (iii) regulation of smooth muscle cell fate and, (iv) vascular stem cells in remodeling and disease.
Molony C, King D, Di Luca M, Kitching M, Olayinka A, Hakimjavadi R, Julius LAN, Fitzpatrick E, Gusti Y, Burtenshaw D, Healy K, Finlay EK, Kernan D, Llobera A, Liu W, Morrow D, Redmond EM, Ducrée J, Cahill PA
Stem cell reviews and reports.. 2021 October 17 (5):1713-1740. Epub 03/17/2021.
Banerjee S, Lin CF, Skinner KA, Schiffhauer LM, Peacock J, Hicks DG, Redmond EM, Morrow D, Huston A, Shayne M, Langstein HN, Miller-Graziano CL, Strickland J, O'Donoghue L, De AK
Cancer research.. 2011 January 1571 (2):318-27. Epub 01/11/2011.
Microvascular retinal endothelial and pericyte cell apoptosis in vitro: role of Hedgehog and Notch.
Sweeney C, Morrow D, Birney YA, Coyle S, Hennessy C, Scheller A, Cummins PM, Walls D, Redmond EM, Cahill PA
FASEB journal : official publication of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology.. 2004 September 18 (12):1421-3. Epub 07/09/2004.
Cyclic strain-induced endothelial MMP-2: role in vascular smooth muscle cell migration.