Albuquerque Journal

UNM doctor brings her ‘A’ game to post

Melendres-Groves uses tenacity, determinat­ion to fight hypertensi­on

- UNM NEWS SERVICE

Lana Melendres-Groves, MD, stands just 5 feet 1½ inches tall, and has seldom – if ever – been described as physically imposing. But she has never let her stature hold her back.

When she was growing up, her father, Art Melendres, a prominent Albuquerqu­e attorney and longtime UNM Regent, counseled confidence. “The best things come in small packages,” he told her. “They will never see you coming, because they will always underestim­ate you.”

Melendres-Groves took his advice to heart and learned the value of tenacity.

At UNM, she was a Regents’ Scholar and a record-setting center midfielder for the women’s soccer team. After medical school and residency at UNM, she did advanced postdoctor­al training at Stanford University in pulmonary vascular disease.

Now an associate professor in UNM’s Department of Internal Medicine, Melendres-Groves helped launch the pulmonary hypertensi­on program, for which she now serves as medical director. And, she was recently appointed the department’s vice chair for diversity, equity and inclusion, where she is responsibl­e for recruiting and retaining faculty, as well as responding to the needs of students and residents.

The Albuquerqu­e native credits her parents with nurturing in her and her three siblings a deep appreciati­on for people from varied background­s.

“It was part of my upbringing to see how different and diverse we are here and to cherish that and hold it up for others to see,” she says. “My dad and mom both realized the importance of our melting pot, being able to empathize and understand those around you.”

Diversity plays a central role in her research. Pulmonary hypertensi­on is a relatively rare progressiv­e disease, which disproport­ionately affects middle-age women, and can eventually lead to right heart failure.

“Right now, we have 14 different medication­s that are approved for treatment along three different pathways,” Melendres-Groves says. “The goal is to halt or slow the progressio­n.”

Although she could have taken her expertise elsewhere, she returned home to practice, in part because so many of her patients are Hispanic – a group that has been little studied by other pulmonary hypertensi­on researcher­s. She sees patients from throughout New Mexico and surroundin­g states.

“My hope is by remaining in New Mexico and being able to highlight difference­s, maybe we can find therapies that are more beneficial to them, versus somebody who’s Anglo,” she says.

Melendres-Groves forged her determined spirit playing soccer, which she took up because she wanted to emulate her two older brothers. Ever since her stellar Division I career at UNM, she has stayed active in the sport as a coach — and she even married one, Joshua Groves, owner of the New Mexico Soccer Academy (their four children play as well).

But as a Hispanic woman, Melendres-Groves has also had to contend with some unique profession­al challenges.

“When I walk into a room, within my specialty it is 99% men, and the majority of those are white men,” she says. “I have no problem with that. But definitely you recognize that you are the only one in the room. There are those who are willing to appreciate that and listen to you, and there are those who say, ‘You’re just a woman.’ ”

In the course of her career, she says, “there have been many times when I questioned why I was putting myself through things I thought didn’t have to happen any more in this day and age, but I did it because there’s others coming behind me.”

Ultimately, Melendres-Groves says, it’s about using her competitiv­e spirit to provide the best care possible to her patients.

“For the disease that I treat, I’m not OK with them just staying the same, which would be a tie, and they should not die, which should be a loss,” she says. “I want them to feel better. I will always work my hardest to the last minute, because you never know what will happen until the last whistle blows.”

 ?? UNM NEWS SERVICE ?? Lana MelendresG­roves, MD, associate professor in UNM’s Department of Internal Medicine.
UNM NEWS SERVICE Lana MelendresG­roves, MD, associate professor in UNM’s Department of Internal Medicine.

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