The path that Mario Rodenas, MD, took to allergy and immunology began with a chance encounter just before his medical school graduation. While dropping his grandparents off at a family celebration, he was introduced to his grandmother’s allergist, sparking a conversation that would inspire his future career.
“He planted a lot of seeds and opened my curiosity in the field,” Rodenas recalls. A few months later, upon beginning his training, Rodenas immediately sought out an allergy elective.
After completing the elective and attending national allergy/immunology conferences, Rodenas felt certain that this was his calling. He completed his internal medicine residency at Baystate Medical Center/Tufts University and an allergy/immunology fellowship at SUNY Downstate, in Brooklyn, New York. Now at Yale School of Medicine, Rodenas is a full-time clinician, treating patients with various allergic or immunologic conditions.
“It's rewarding for me to treat chronic hives,” says Rodenas. “It can be very frustrating for patients, as most people have an opinion about it—the patient, the neighbors, the friends, their doctors—but nobody is able to get to the bottom of it and control them. We in immunology can do that. We have great tools available and can improve their quality of life.” Rodenas is also passionate about other conditions, including immunodeficiency disorders, penicillin allergy delabeling, and eosinophilic esophagitis.
Looking back, allergy and immunology have been prevalent threads throughout his life. Rodenas’s grandmother struggled with severe asthma, requiring regular allergy shots, and his siblings had allergic asthma as well. Rodenas himself experienced an allergy to penicillin as a child.