Dr. Lee Hamm

Dean, Tulane University School of Medicine

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

Dr. Hamm is an expert on kidney diseases and hypertension

Contact

Social

Biography

Dr. Hamm, an expert on kidney diseases and hypertension, joined the Tulane faculty in 1992. He has served as Director of the Tulane Hypertension and Renal Center of Excellence and chair of the American Heart Association Council on the Kidney and Cardiovascular Disease. Dr. Hamm now serves as Senior Vice President and Dean of Tulane University's School of Medicine.

Areas of Expertise

Hypertension
Nephrology

Education

University of Alabama

M.D.

Affiliations

  • Tulane Lakeside Hospital for Women and Children
  • Tulane Medical Center

Media Appearances

Nell Nolan: Spirit of Charity, Stake out for Justice, Dark and Stormy Night, Boys Town LA

The New Orleans Advocate  online

2018-11-18

During the 19th annual Spirit of Charity Award Dinner given by Spirit of Charity Foundation and held at the JW Marriott, limelight turned to Dr. L. Lee Hamm III, senior vice president and dean of the Tulane University School of Medicine. The award is given to a physician whose career began or was nurtured in the healing and teaching ward of Charity Hospital and who has made a significant contribution to medicine. The foundation continues the mission and legacy of Charity Hospital.

View More

Tulane gets $25 million to fund research at School of Medicine

The New Orleans Advocate  online

2017-09-18

The department of medicine is the largest translational research department in the School of Medicine, according to Dr. Lee Hamm, dean and senior vice president of the school.

View More

Dr. Lee Hamm named dean of Tulane's medical school

Nola.com  online

2013-06-26

Hamm, who is board-certified in internal medicine and nephrology, occupies the Harry B. Greenberg Chair of Medicine and is executive vice dean and chairman of the department of medicine. He is co-director of the Tulane Hypertension and Renal Center of Excellence, and he was the medical school's interim dean before Sachs' arrival in November 2007.

View More

Articles

Differential Network Enrichment Analysis Reveals Novel Lipid Pathways in Chronic Kidney Disease

Bioinformatics

Lee Hamm, et al.

2019

Functional enrichment testing methods can reduce data comprising hundreds of altered biomolecules to smaller sets of altered biological ‘concepts’ that help generate testable hypotheses. This study leveraged differential-network-enrichment-analysis methodology to identify and validate lipid subnetworks that potentially differentiate chronic kidney disease (CKD) by severity or progression.

View more

Heart disease and stroke statistics—2018 update: a report from the American Heart Association

Circulation

Lee Hamm, et al.

2018

Each year, the American Heart Association (AHA), in conjunction with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the National Institutes of Health, and other government agencies, brings together in a single document the most up-to-date statistics related to heart disease, stroke, and the cardiovascular risk factors listed in the AHA’s My Life Check - Life’s Simple 7 (Figure1), which include core health behaviors (smoking, physical activity, diet, and weight) and health factors (cholesterol, blood pressure [BP], and glucose control) that contribute to cardiovascular health.

View more

Calcium receptor signaling and citrate transport

Urolithiasis

Ryan W Walker, Shijia Zhang, Joycelynn A Coleman-Barnett, L Lee Hamm, Kathleen S Hering-Smith

2018

The calcium sensing receptor (CaSR) in the distal nephron decreases the propensity for calcium stones. Here we investigate if the apical CaSR in the proximal tubule also prevents stone formation acting via regulation of apical dicarboxylate and citrate transport. Urinary citrate, partially reabsorbed as a dicarboxylate in the proximal tubule lumen, inhibits stone formation by complexing calcium.

View more

Show All +