Dr. Anand Irimpen

Professor of Medicine

  • New Orleans LA UNITED STATES
  • Tulane School of Medicine
airimpe@tulane.edu

Dr. Irimpen conducted a study on the effects of Hurricane Katrina on acute myocardial infarction in New Orleanians impacted by the storm

Contact

Biography

Anand M. Irimpen, MD joined the Tulane University Heart and Vascular Institute in 1992 as a General Cardiology Fellow before becoming an Interventional Cardiology Fellow. He currently is an Associate Professor of Medicine and Director of our Interventional Cardiology Fellowship. He is a graduate of the Grant Medical College at Bombay University, Byculla in Bombay, India and received further professional medical training through an internship in the Department of Medicine at St. Luke’s Hospital at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland Ohio and a residency in the Department of Medicine at the Medical College of Ohio at Toledo. In addition to his clinical work, Dr. Irimpen does research, most recently a study on the effects of Hurricane Katrina on acute myocardial infarction in New Orleanians impacted by the storm. This scholarly project won first place at this year’s American College of Cardiology conference for the state of Louisiana.

Areas of Expertise

Cardiovascular Disease
Interventional Cardiology
Cardiology
Myocardial Infarction
Internal Medicine

Media Appearances

Hurricane checklist: Batteries, bottled water – and a plan for heart care

American Heart Association News  online

2019-08-02

Helping with stress and anxiety is critical to help prevent some people from resorting to old bad habits – like smoking or excessive drinking, said Dr. Anand Irimpen, chief of cardiology at Southeast Louisiana Veterans Health Care System in New Orleans.

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Bryan Batt and other Tulane Summer Lyric Theatre alums return for 50th anniversary show

Nola.com  online

2017-06-23

Of course, the crowd loved every minute of it, including Mark and Barbara Workman (who has spearheaded the endowment), Paulette and Frank Stewart, Don-Paul Landry, Eddie Bonin and Rene Fransen, David Hoover and Scott Hutcheson, Debbie and Jamie Reily, Drs. Maya and Anand Irimpen, Donna Kay Berger, Michael Brown and Linda Green, Lisa Carey, Jane Haas, Jane Schuluter, Beth Utterback, Dominic Massa, Barbara and Biff Motley, Jan and Bob Carr, Cassie Worley, Walda and Sydney Besthoff, and theater founder Francis Monachino's children Dr. Vivienne Monachino Hayne and Francesca Monachino.

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Hurricane Katrina linked to a rise in heart attacks years later

Popular Science  online

2016-11-15

New Orleans cardiologist Dr. Anand Irimpen began to notice that his on-call nights at the hospital were getting busier soon after the devastation wrought by Hurricane Katrina. It seemed as if many more people were having heart attacks.

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Articles

The broken heart syndrome: Takotsubo cardiomyopathy

Trends in Cardiovascular Medicine

Matthew N. Peters MD, Praveen George MD, Anand M. Irimpen MD

2015-05-01

First described in 1990, Takotsubo cardiomyopathy consists of a transient systolic dysfunction of localized segments of the left ventricle. Commonly occurring in postmenopausal women, Takotsubo is often associated with intense physical and/or emotional stress. It is traditionally identified by distinctive wall motion patterns on transthoracic echocardiogram and left ventriculography. Further understanding of the disease mechanisms and recognition of at-risk populations has potentially tremendous therapeutic benefit.

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OxLDL induces endothelial dysfunction and death via TRAF3IP2: Inhibition by HDL3 and AMPK activators

Free Radical Biology and Medicine

Anthony J. Valente, Anand M. Irimpen, Ulrich Siebenlist, Bysani Chandrasekar

2014

Oxidized low-density lipoprotein (oxLDL) induces endothelial cell death through the activation of NF-κB and AP-1 pathways. TRAF3IP2 is a redox-sensitive cytoplasmic adapter protein and an upstream regulator of IKK/NF-κB and JNK/AP-1. Here we show that oxLDL-induced death in human primary coronary artery endothelial cells (ECs) was markedly attenuated by the knockdown of TRAF3IP2 or the lectin-like oxLDL receptor 1 (LOX-1). Further, oxLDL induced Nox2/superoxide-dependent TRAF3IP2 expression, IKK/p65 and JNK/c-Jun activation, and LOX-1 upregulation, suggesting a reinforcing mechanism. Similarly, the lysolipids present in oxLDL (16:0-LPC and 18:0-LPC) and minimally modified LDL also upregulated TRAF3IP2 expression. Notably, whereas native HDL3 reversed oxLDL-induced TRAF3IP2 expression and cell death, 15-lipoxygenase-modified HDL3 potentiated its proapoptotic effects. The activators of the AMPK/Akt pathway, adiponectin, AICAR, and metformin, attenuated superoxide generation, TRAF3IP2 expression, and oxLDL/TRAF3IP2-mediated EC death. Further, both HDL3 and adiponectin reversed oxLDL/TRAF3IP2-dependent monocyte adhesion to endothelial cells in vitro. Importantly, TRAF3IP2 gene deletion and the AMPK activators reversed oxLDL-induced impaired vasorelaxation ex vivo. These results indicate that oxLDL-induced endothelial cell death and dysfunction are mediated via TRAF3IP2 and that native HDL3 and the AMPK activators inhibit this response. Targeting TRAF3IP2 could potentially inhibit progression of atherosclerotic vascular diseases.

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Natural Disasters and Myocardial Infarction: The Six Years After Hurricane Katrina

Mayo Clinic Proceedings

Matthew N. Peters MD, John C. Moscona MD, Morgan J. Katz MD, Kevin B. Deandrade MD, Henry C. Quevedo MD, Sumit Tiwari MD, Andrew R. Burchett MD, Thomas A. Turnage MD, Kanwar Y. Singh MD, Edmond N. Fomunung MD, Sudesh Srivastav PhD, Patrice Delafontaine MD, Anand M. Irimpen MD

2014

To determine the prolonged effect of Hurricane Katrina on the incidence and timing of acute myocardial infarction (AMI) in the city of New Orleans.

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