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Alumni Faces

Alumni Notes

Redford Williams is applying the tools of genomics to explain differences
in how individuals respond to stress.
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Hunting
down the hostile gene
An expert in type A behavior looks to biology to better
understand the bodys response to stress.
By Cathy Shufro
Photograph by Jim Bounds
The tools that Redford B. Williams, M.D. 67, HS 69, FW 70,
is using to try to save the world have changed, but his preoccupations
have not. For his first study in psychosomatic medicine as a medical student
in the mid-60s, he wheeled a hulking Goddert hæmotonograph (an early
automatic blood pressure monitor) down the halls of Grace-New Haven Hospital,
using the machine to measure blood pressure in patients undergoing deliberately
stressful interviews.

Four decades later, as head of the Division of Behavioral Medicine at
Duke University Medical Center, Williams is using a whole new toy,
the technology of the genomics revolution, to study how genetic variations
might help explain differences in the bodys response to stress.
Williams continues to explore the same questions that intrigued him as
a student: why are some people more likely than others to mount sharp
physiological reactions to stress? How might that lead to disease? How
can harmful reactions be tempered by changes in the patients attitudes
toward others?

As for saving the world, or a few of its denizens, Williams has developed
books and courses to train people to use the findings of mind-body researchers
to manage their daily lives. He has written two mass-market booksLifeskills:
8 Simple Ways to Build Stronger Relationships, Communicate More Clearly,
Improve Your Health and Anger Kills: 17 Strategies for Controlling
the Hostility That Can Harm Your Healthboth co-authored with
his wife, historian Virginia Williams, Ph.D. Their company, Williams LifeSkills,
offers corporate workshops and a videotaped course. They believe that
people can improve relationships by monitoring their feelings and, when
anger arises, evaluating whether to react or let go of their anger and
accept the situation. A 1999 study by Yori Gidron, Ph.D., a researcher
in the sociology of health at Ben-Gurion University in Israel, of 22 men
with heart disease and high scores for hostility, showed that the men
who took a course similar to the Williamses reported fewer hostile
feelings and had significantly lower resting blood pressures than did
controls two months after taking the course.

Williams helped to determine that not all facets of the intense Type A
personality are hard on the body. The toxic core of Type
A behavior is hostility, which he defines as a tendency to anger easily,
to view others with cynicism and to express antagonism. Williams
insights apparently have broad appeal: in 1998 he presented findings on
the mind-body connection at a conference on Tibetan medicine hosted by
the Dalai Lama, who mentions Williams work in his book The Art
of Happiness: A Handbook for Living.

Williams sees behavioral medicine as what real medicine ought to
be, where youre concerned not only with the biomedical aspect of
the patients condition but also how the psychological aspects of
the patient and his or her environment affect the biomedical aspects.
Its being a good doctor.

He might just as easily have become a lawyer. The choice was made for
him by chance when he came north to attend Harvard from rural eastern
Virginia, where his father worked for the farm bureau and where hed
met his future wife in junior high school. He decided to try for a spot
in a freshman seminar, partly because it would entitle him to a
stack pass to Widener [Library], more valuable than gold. Williams
applied for two seminars, one in political science, the other in behavioral
science. Being admitted to the latter and finding it engrossing totally
pushed me toward medical school. A flirtation with biochemistry
during medical school ended after a summer lab job that consisted largely
of grinding up dog livers. As a fourth-year student, Williams chose a
Yale residency in internal medicine over psychiatry, realizing he was
interested in medical rather than psychiatric illness.

Since then Williams has investigated a broad range of questions, including
the link between depression and death rates for heart disease patients
and the effects of high-demand, low-authority jobs on workers. He has
studied how the life spans of poor children are affected by how their
parents treat them, how hostile spouses contribute to depression in their
mates and how having young children affects the stress levels of working
women.

Common to all this research is the study of the effects of interpersonal
skills and economic circumstances on an individuals physiology.
The hypothesis, gradually being borne out by research, is that certain
stances toward the world, such as viewing other people cynically or feeling
socially isolated, correlate with physical reactions that increase the
likelihood that a person will develop a new illness or that an existing
illness will worsen.

The mapping of the genome and the accompanying technology have provided
a new dimension for exploring these mechanisms. Its like
a whole new world has been opened up, Williams says during a phone
interview from his home in Hillsborough, N.C. Hes working on a
study of 1,000 people500 with high ratings for hostility and 500
siblingsto look for genetic bases of hostility. And he recently
completed a study published in Psychosomatic Medicine showing that
a genetic variation could be linked to reduced serotonin function, which
has been associated, in turn, with health-damaging behaviors such as aggression
and impulsivity. Williams and his colleagues found that intense reactions
to stress are associated with variations in the gene that regulates reuptake
of serotonin after it has been released. Subjects with a fairly common
polymorphism of the gene showed larger cardiovascular reactions to stress
than did subjects without the variation. The variation is present in only
about 30 percent of Asians, 57 percent of Caucasians and more than 70
percent of Africans and African-Americans, which makes Williams wonder
if the polymorphism contributes to the high rates of hypertension among
African-Americans.

Williams hasnt learned the laboratory skills fundamental to the
new gene technology. I couldnt do a PCR to save my life,
he admits with a laugh. His role, he says, has been to view health and
behavior globally, to see the forest, and to undertake studies
with the help of experts in genetics and pharmacology.

Part of seeing the forest has been recognizing the practical implication
of his research findings: that people need guidance to correct harmful
attitudes and behavior patterns. Williams says helping people change has
until now been a craft, mastered by some therapists and bungled
by others. With their course, he and Virginia Williams are trying
to take behavioral interventions and treatment and package them in ways
that doctors anywhere in the country can even prescribe and count on their
patients getting the same interventions. Theres a therapeutic
basis for prescribing such training, says Williams, because patients who
are depressed, anxious or lonely are less likely to take medications or
stick with other medical regimes than are their more contented counterparts.
The National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute of the National Institutes
of Health is supporting a randomized clinical trial that is testing the
efficacy of LifeSkills training for reducing high blood
pressure.

Williams is not immune to the risks he studies. I still have this
hostile personality type, and I still mess up occasionally. But Im
better at listening, better at not firing off an aggressive remark, than
I used to be. Im still married to Virginia, which I probably wouldnt
be if I didnt learn to manage these personality characteristics.
He enjoys cavorting with his two grandsons and playing tennis, and he
and his wife pay lip service to the need for down time,
but were very busy.

Despite the pressures, Williams says he is wholeheartedly enjoying a career
in which he is trying to do what a physician is supposed to be
doing
to improve the human condition by reducing the likelihood
of disease developing, or to improve the prognosis of disease once it
has developed.

Cathy Shufro is a contributing editor of Yale Medicine. Jim
Bounds is a staff photographer for The News & Observer in Raleigh,
N.C.
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Familiar Faces
Do you have a colleague who is making
a difference in medicine or public health or has followed an unusual path
since leaving Yale? Wed like to hear about alumni of the School
of Medicine, School of Public Health, Physician Associate Program and
the medical schools doctoral, fellowship and residency training
programs. Drop us a line at ymm@yale.edu or write to Faces, Yale Medicine,
P.O. Box 7612, New Haven, CT 06519-0612.
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Karen Casper and Pieter Pil
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Practicing medicine on Marthas Vineyard introduces an extra variable
in decision making for Karen Casper, M.D., HS 97, and Pieter
M. Pil, M.D. 96, Ph.D.: the weather.

When presented with a complicated case, Casper, an emergency medicine
physician, and Pil, a general surgeon, must factor in wind, fog and waves
when deciding whether to treat the malady locally or send the patient
to Boston. Patients needing big-city facilities go there by small plane,
helicopter or ambulance (via ferry)weather permitting.

Pil describes the 15-bed Marthas Vineyard Hospital in Oak Bluffs,
with its two operating suites, as state of the art, but
it does not have a large blood bank and some specialists are not available
full time on this resort island seven miles off the Massachusetts coast.
Physicians there avoid doing high-risk surgery except when theres
no time or no way to send patients to the mainland. Its
a whole new level of stress, says Casper. Youre hoping
the Coast Guard will think its safe; you dont want them
on a helicopter and to have them go down.

Considering the medical implications of weather has been just one orientation
to island life required of Casper and Pil since they moved to the Vineyard
in July. The couple, who met at Yale, run into their patients everywhere
they go. On an island with just 15,000 winter residents, youre
not anonymous, says Pil. You know half the island.
He likes that. In a big hospital, you treat people and they disappear.

You have to be aware of patient confidentiality at all times,
says Casper. It shouldnt be different, but its more
obvious.

Even in this small setting, Casper makes a broad spectrum of diagnoses
in the ER. Ive seen everything from an atrial myxoma [a
rare cardiac tumor] to tick-borne diseases. Shes seen lots
of tick-borne diseases: Rocky Mountain spotted fever, Lyme disease, babesiosis
and even tularemia. Ticks cause so many illnesses that the hospital staff
includes a full-time infectious diseases specialist. The staff also includes
Stephen W. Miller, M.D. 67, an associate professor of radiology
at Harvard Medical School and staff radiologist at the Massachusetts General
Hospital. Since June 1998, Miller has directed medical imaging at the
islands hospital. This arrangement includes a teleradiology link
to Mass General.

The onslaught of tourists, who swell the summer population sevenfold to
105,000, quickens the pace at the hospital but also reduces the rate of
locals seeking elective surgery. Everybody earns a living in three
months, so theyre not going to get their hernia fixed in August,
says Pil.

Pil says he has attracted a following among patients for a surprising
reason: The word is out that I speak Portuguese. An estimated
2,000 of the islands year-round residents, about 13 percent, are
Brazilian, and Pils Belgian parents raised him in Brazil, where
they were working. The islands Brazilians, many of whom work as
deli clerks, carpenters, landscapers and small-business owners, often
approach Pil to discuss nonsurgical medical problems because he is the
only Portuguese-speaking physician on the island.

Because real estate is so expensive, some hospital employees live on the
mainland and commute 45 minutes by ferry. Real estate costs pose a challenge
for Pil and Casper too, since they are looking for a house.

But Casper says Marthas Vineyard is a great place to raise their
son, Gedeon, who turned 2 in February. The hospital runs a child-care
center right on the grounds, and the schools are very good. Casper sees
the island as a potential research laboratory for the public health degree
she was working on when they left Boston. She is thinking about raising
chickens, toobut shes likely to postpone agricultural ventures
for the moment. Casper and Pils second child, Alexa, was born December
4 at Marthas Vineyard Hospital.

When they moved to the island, Pil says, We figured wed
either like it or hate it. They like it.

Cathy Shufro
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Louis Del Guercio
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Minimally invasive surgery has been something of a mixed blessing for
thoracic surgeon Louis R.M. Del Guercio, M.D. 53. Its
easier on the patient but less satisfying for the surgeon, says
Del Guercio, who retired a year ago as chair of surgery at New York Medical
College. He feels confident and fulfilled using his hands instead of operating
remotely. For young surgeons who grew up playing video games, minimally
invasive surgery is duck soup, says Del Guercio. Not
for us dinosaurs.

In his role as dinosaur, Del Guercio uses his hands to paint
landscapes in oil, an outgrowth of his work as a surgical illustrator.
He also teaches and consults at New York Medical College and at Westchester
Medical Center, where he was director of surgery. Last summer he joined
the executive committee of the Association of Yale Alumni in Medicine.

Del Guercios contribution to research was honored by New York Medical
College last spring, when the college sponsored a research day in his
name. Del Guercios research focused on physiologic monitoring of
the critically ill and injured. In the 1960s, he and colleagues at Albert
Einstein College of Medicine were the first to describe what textbooks
now routinely refer to as hyperdynamic septic shock. They
discovered that in septic shockshock caused by widespread infectionthe
heart pumps a higher-than-normal volume of blood. Most forms of shock
cause cardiac output to drop.

These days, Del Guercio is more attuned to tidal ebb and flow than to
cardiac output: mornings and evenings, he fishes for bluefish and striped
bass from his beachfront home on Long Island Sound in Larchmont, N.Y.
He also races a 30-foot Shields sloop with his daughter, who is the skipper,
and his son-in-law and a friend, who serve as crew. His wife, Paula Marie
Helene Del Guercio, enjoys the fish dinners but declines to set foot on
the boat.

In recent years Del Guercio has also gone farther afield than the Soundto
a war zone and on a pilgrimage. He volunteered for the 1991 Gulf War to
help out a military recruiter who had trouble signing up chest surgeons;
the recruiter asked Del Guercio to set an example. As a reserve officer,
Del Guercio had first served as a second lieutenant in the artillery in
the early 1950s. Promoted to colonel for the Gulf War and stationed at
an evacuation hospital in Chorlu, Turkey, he did surgery on a few injured
soldiers and then, when a fierce tornado hit the Turkish town in October
1991, he helped treat the 300 people injured during the storm. Getting
an Army commendation medal at age 62 was a thrill, said Del Guercio,
who is now 74.

Reading a pilgrims account in The New York Times led Del
Guercio to another adventure in the summer of 2000, a 200-mile trek along
the Camino de Santiago de Compostela in Spain. The route, traveled since
the time of Charlemagne, stretches from the Pyrenees west to the Atlantic.
Del Guercio hiked for a month with two of his eight children: Gino, who
makes documentaries, and Christopher, a pineapple and taro farmer in Hawaii.
 Del Guercio was not consciously aware of why he was there until Gino,
filming other pilgrims, began questioning them about their motivations.
It was then that Del Guercio realized that he was walking in the hope
that his developmentally disabled grandson, Ian, would learn to walk.
Ians physicians had said that was impossible. Perhaps God might
grant that to Ian, said Del Guercio, adding, As they say in the
Bronx, It couldnt hoyt. Ian, now 4, is walking.
How that came about, against all odds, is still a mystery.

Cathy Shufro
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Francis Coughlin
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Another bit of mystery surfaced at a dinner for New Haven-area alumni
leaders late last summer following the White Jacket Ceremony. AYAM President
Francis R. Coughlin Jr., M.D. 52, spoke of two coincidences
that he grouped under the heading six degrees of separationthe
notion that each of us is linked to any other human on Earth by a maximum
of six personal connections. The chance encounter his daughter-in-law
had with Louis R.M. Del Guercio, M.D. 53, for example, was
a simple three degrees of separation: her mother had lived as a girl in
the house now inhabited by Del Guercio, who was a year behind Coughlin
at Yale and a colleague in the decades since.

Coughlin spoke of another coincidence. Standing at the head of the table
in an upstairs room at Morys, he produced a thick, bound volume
that he said his father had assembled in the 1950s. It consisted of the
medical school Bulletin from the four years Coughlin was a student
in New Haven. His own education ended at age 16, and he was immensely
proud to have a son at Yale, said Coughlin, a retired thoracic
surgeon and an attorney, who discovered the book recently while rummaging
though an attic.

Leafing through the pages, he came across an item that delighted him:
on page 133 of the 1948-49 Bulletin, he read the course description
for a gastroenterology seminar and the name of its instructor, Samuel
D. Kushlan, M.D. 35. I had heard of Sam Kushlan as a
student, and he was known as the best clinical teacher at the medical
school, Coughlin said. And here he is more than 50 years
later. And here I am.

As it happened, Kushlan was in the room, as was Del Guercio, the AYAMs
newest executive committee member. By another coincidence, sitting a few
feet from both men was Robert W. Lyons, M.D. 64, chief of
infectious diseases at St. Francis Hospital in Hartford. As a Georgetown
undergraduate in the late 1950s, Lyons was vice president of the drama
society and a classmate of playwright John Guare. Like Lyons, Guare would
come north to New Haven to attend one of Yales professional schools,
in his case the School of Drama. Later still, he would write a play with
a more-than-relevant title: Six Degrees of Separation.

Michael Fitzsousa |
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