Richard Pierce, MD
Associate Professor of Pediatrics (Critical Care)Cards
About
Titles
Associate Professor of Pediatrics (Critical Care)
Associate Program Director for Pediatric Critical Care Medicine Fellowship, Pediatrics; Co-Director of the Mentored Clinical Experience, Medical Research Training Program
Biography
Ric Pierce grew up in the midwest and completed his undergraduate studies at Oberlin College followed by a Master of Science degree in organic chemistry and Medical Doctorate degree from the University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign. Following medical school he completed pediatric residency at Connecticut Children's Medical Center before coming to Yale New Haven Children's Hospital for pediatric critical care fellowship. He has continued at Yale University as faculty and is actively engaged in the care of critically ill children as well as several basic and translational vascular biology research projects and multiple educational endeavors with students, residents and fellows.
Appointments
Pediatric Critical Care Medicine
Associate Professor on TermPrimary
Other Departments & Organizations
- Center for Infection and Immunity
- CPIRT - Center for Pulmonary Injury, Inflammation, Repair and Therapeutics
- Human and Translational Immunology Program
- Janeway Society
- Molecular Medicine, Pharmacology, and Physiology
- Pediatric Critical Care Medicine
- Pediatric Critical Care Transport Program
- Pediatric Genomics Discovery Program (PGDP)
- Pediatric Intensive Care Unit
- Pediatrics
- Pierce Lab
- Program in Translational Biomedicine (PTB)
- Slayman House Affiliates
- Vascular Biology and Therapeutics Program
- Yale Combined Program in the Biological and Biomedical Sciences (BBS)
- Yale Medicine
- Yale Ventures
Education & Training
- Pediatric Critical Care Fellowship
- Yale University (2016)
- Pediatric Residency
- Connecticut Children's Medical Center (2013)
- MD
- University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (2010)
- MS
- University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign, Organic Chemistry (2008)
Research
Overview
My three professional passions are providing excellent patient care, educating trainees, and conducting clinically impactful vascular research. In the PICU, I strive to provide compassionate, high quality and timely care to all my patients. Teaching trainees is also a top priority, and I routinely give many formal lectures, short talks as well as create curriculums and educational materials. I invest time and energy in my lectures to make sure they are clinically relevant and are appropriate for all levels of trainees. Finally, I am passionate about my research, where I investigate blood vessel dysfunction and its consequences in critically ill children, with a keen focus on permeability changes. Ultimately, I would like to develop new therapies to target the blood vessels that improve the lives of critically ill children.
My laboratory focuses on several interrelated avenues of research. First, I investigate how EC junctional molecules are regulated in the setting of inflammation. These investigations occur in culture models of capillary endothelium and focus on small GTPases and their regulators, GAPs and GEFs, regulate permeability of EC monolayers and re-organization of tight junction molecules. I demonstrated the importance of the regulation of the small GTPase RhoB in a pediatric patient with systemic capillary leak syndrome caused by a single gene mutation in a GAP with previously unknown function, p190BRhoGAP. We are focused on understanding the GAP and GEF regulation of RhoB have branched to investigate other small GTPases in the Rap family.
A second major avenue of research is on the clinical mechanisms and consequences of EC dysfunction in critically ill children. I place great emphasis on maintaining direct clinical relevance in my research projects and have focused my efforts on human samples. To this end, I established a prospective study investigating the single-cell transcriptomic changes of EC isolated from critically ill children compared to healthy children. This project has identified a new small molecule mediators of blood vessel function in critical illness. This line of research has lead to new investigations into how blood vessels break down and medications that may restore barrier function.
Another focus of my lab is investigating consequences of vascular dyfunction in critically ill children, namely pulmonary capillary dysfunction in pediatric acute lung injury. We leverage cutting edge multi-omic techniques on patient samples to survey immune cells isolated from the lungs of critically ill children with acute lung injury. Finally, I am active in Yale’s own Pediatric Genomic Discovery Program (PGDP) and am able to rapidly investigate the effects of clinically impactful gene mutations on vascular function.
Medical Research Interests
Academic Achievements & Community Involvement
Clinical Care
Overview
Richard Pierce, MD, is a pediatric critical care specialist. He says the best part of his job is watching healthy children walk out of the hospital smiling and clutching a toy.
“Seeing a child, who came to us critically ill, leaving the hospital and doing a lot better is a great thing,” Dr. Pierce says.
Treating critically ill children is different than treating adults, he points out. “Children may have genetic diseases that adult doctors don’t encounter frequently, and they have different organ function parameters adult doctors may not be familiar with,” Dr. Pierce says. “It takes the specialized expertise of a pediatric critical care unit to understand the parameters around vital signs, organ function, and different diseases.”
Dr. Pierce’s research focuses on how blood vessels function in critically ill children. “Blood vessels carry blood, oxygen, and glucose that are needed to maintain organ function. In critically ill children, these processes can get disrupted,” Dr. Pierce says. “I look at a phenomenon called capillary leak, where the blood vessels aren't able to retain the fluid in the vessels and it leaks out. It can cause swelling of the face, or the hands and the feet, as well as low blood pressure, or even organ failure if it's not treated.”
Dr. Pierce is an assistant professor of pediatric critical care at Yale School of Medicine.
Clinical Specialties
News & Links
Media
- Confocal image of ZO1 in human dermal microvascular endothelial cells treated with TNF to disrupt cell junctions
News
- July 26, 2023
2022-23 Department of Pediatrics Faculty Awards
- June 06, 2023
New Research at Yale Points to Better Understanding of Treatment Targets for Necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) in Premature Babies
- February 22, 2022
Richard Pierce, MD, Selected to Receive the Rudolph J. Anderson Endowed Postdoctoral Fellowship
- June 16, 2021
Department of Pediatrics Faculty Awards for the 2020-21 Academic Year