![Dr. Roderic G Eckenhoff MD, Anesthesiologist](/doctor_images/c/c1/96385.jpg?v=1ecc)
Dr. Roderic G Eckenhoff MD
Anesthesiologist
3400 Spruce St 4 Dulles Building Philadelphia PA, 19104About
Dr. Roderic Eckenhoff is an anesthesiologist practicing in Philadelphia, PA. Dr. Eckenhoff ensures the safety of patients who are about to undergo surgery. Anestesiologists specialize in general anesthesia, which will (put the patient to sleep), sedation, which will calm the patient or make him or her unaware of the situation, and regional anesthesia, which just numbs a specific part of the body. As an anesthesiologist, Dr. Eckenhoff also might help manage pain after an operation.
Education and Training
Northwestern Uniiversity 1978
Northwestern University The Feinberg School of Medicine 1978
Board Certification
AnesthesiologyAmerican Board of AnesthesiologyABA- Hospice and Palliative Medicine
Provider Details
Expert Publications
Data provided by the National Library of Medicine- Volatile anesthetics alter protein stability.
- Halothane, an inhalational anesthetic agent, increases folding stability of serum albumin.
- Steric hindrance is not required for n-alkanol cutoff in soluble proteins.
- On the relevance of "clinically relevant concentrations" of inhaled anesthetics in in vitro experiments.
- A designed four-alpha-helix bundle that binds the volatile general anesthetic halothane with high affinity.
- General anesthetic binding to gramicidin A: the structural requirements.
- Gamma-aminobutyric acid enhancement of halothane binding in rat cerebellum.
- Inhaled anesthetic binding sites in human serum albumin.
- Halothane binding to a G protein coupled receptor in retinal membranes by photoaffinity labeling.
- Cooperative binding of inhaled anesthetics and ATP to firefly luciferase.
- Predictability of weak binding from X-ray crystallography: inhaled anesthetics and myoglobin.
- Determination of the hydrophobicity of local anesthetic agents.
- Anesthetic stabilization of protein intermediates: myoglobin and halothane.
- Multiple specific binding targets for inhaled anesthetics in the mammalian brain.
- What are "relevant" concentrations?
Dr. Roderic G Eckenhoff MD's Practice location
Practice At 3400 Spruce St 4 Dulles Building
3400 Spruce St 4 Dulles Building -Philadelphia, PA 19104Get Direction
Dr. Roderic G Eckenhoff MD's reviews
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