4 results on '"Lena Shay"'
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2. Fourth Annual Summer Research Summit on Health Equity Organized by the Center of Excellence in Health Equity, Training and Research, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas 77030, USA on May 20, 2021
- Author
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Aanand Naik, Abbhirami Rajagopal, Adam Floyd, Adriana Gil, Aisha Tepede, Aisha Koroma, Aisha Deslandes, Akua Graf, Alejandra Ruiz-Velasco, Alexa Reyna-Carrillo, Alexandra Alvarenga, Alexia Awoseyi, Alexis Hernandez, Alexis Lawrence, Ali Asghar-Ali, Allyssa Abacan, Alyce Adams, Alyna Khan, Alyson McGregor, Alyssa Hansen, Amari Johnson, Andrea Coj, Andrea Vick, Andria Tatem, Anjali Aggarwal, Anjali Deendyal, Ann Blake, Annabella Awazi, Anne VanHorn, Anuj Marathe, Anusha Jayaram, April Adams, Arabella Hall, Ariana Heredia, Ariana Chavarria, Asha Morrow, Ashley Butler, Asia Hodges, Aura Mejia, Avani Patel, Ayleen Hernandez, Benjamin Akande, Blessing Felix-Okoroji, Brisa Garcia, Buckleitner Jenna, Callie Fischer, Camden Hallmark, Cara Coren, Carlos Ramos, Cecilia Gambala, Charleta Guillory, Chelsea Livingston, Chioma Onyejiaka, Chishinga Callender, Christina Aldrich, Christopher Largaespada, Claire Bocchini, Craig Cochran, Danielle Sherman, Danielle Gonzales, David Venzon, David Wittkower, Debbe Thompson, Deborah Thompson, Debra Eseonu, Deepa Dongarwar, Delia Rospigliosi, Denise Smart, Denisse Velazquez, Derek Lockett, Eberechi Nwogu-Onyemkpa, Elizabeth Byrne, Elyse Lopez, Eric Dybbro, Eric Storch, Erica Onwuegbuchu, Erica Valdes, Erin Donovan, Eunique Williams, Evan Keil, Faith Ihekweazu, Felicia Rosiji, Gabriela Espinoza-Candelaria, Gabriella Chmaitelli, Gabriella Tavera, Gail Oneal, Gal Barbut, Gauvain Tonpouwo, George Carrum, Gina DeFelice, Hamisu Salihu, Heather Haq, Helen Heslop, Houston Lester, Ifeoma Ezenwabachili, Ila Gautham, Jacquelin Powell, Jaime Alleyn, Jasmine King, Jaydira Rivero, Jayer Chung, Jayna Dave, Jean Raphael, Jen Bryan, Jendi Haug, Jennifer Bryan, Jenny Blau, Jerry Bellamy, Jessica Medrano, Jessica Ramirez, Jocelyn Greely, Jonnae Atkinson, Jorge Miranda, Jose Dominguez, Jose Roca, Joseph Mills, Joshua Hamer, Joshua Muñiz, Julliet Ogu, Karen Gibbs, Karen Johnson, Karen Riggins, Karla Fredricks, Keila Lopez, Kellie Williams, Keyishi Peters, Kil Hyein, LaQuisa Hill, Lee Weinstein, Lena Shay, Lentz Lefevre, Lindy Ross, Lisa Noll, Lois Akpati, Lorin Crear, Lucy Puryear, Maame Coleman, Madhuri Vasudevan, Malachi Miller, Maria Vigil-Mallette, Maria Jaramillo, Mariam Chacko, Mariana Baroni, Mariana Murillo, Maricarmen Marroquin, Marina Masciale, Marlene McNeese, Martinez Austin, Matthew Koller, Maya Lee, Maziar Nourian, Megan Abadom, Meghna Sebastian, Meheret Adera, Mei-Lei Laracuente, Michelle Lopez, Michelle Wright, Miguel Montero-Baker, Monica Gonzalez, Morrow Adelene, Mosope Adeyeye, Muzaffar Qazilbash, Namrata Walia, Nancy Shenoi, Natalia Rodriguez, Naya Mukdadi, Neeraj Saini, Norma Olvera, Ololade Chris-Rotimi, Paige Hoyer, Parisa Fallah, Peggy Smith, Premal Lulla, Priscilla Ehieze, Priyanka Murali, Rachel Head, Rachel Nwaneri, Rachelle Wanser, Racquel Lyn, Rammurti Kamble, Ramyar Gilani, Raquel Martinez, Rathi Asaithambi, Reginald Hatter, Rhanna Wilson, Ria Brown, Robert Shulman, Robert Mbilinyi, Robert Levine, Roe Avery, Romil Patel, Roslyn Aduhene-Opoku, Ruth Mizu, Saad Usmani, Sadia Usmani, Saeed Ahmed, Samantha Moore, Samer Hadidi, Sana Erabti, Sana Javed, Sana Younus, Sanders Mar’Quenda, Sandy Samaan, Sara Alam, Sara Welty, Sergio Navarro, Shad Deering, Shaine Morris, Shana Alford, Shangir Siddique, Shantyka Walton, Shayan Bhathena, Shelease O’Bryant, Shital Patel, Sindhu Idicula, Sophia Banu, Sophie Albert, Sophie McCullum, Sophie Lin, Star Okolie, Sunita Agarwal, Susan Gillespie, Syed Hussaini, Sylvia Hysong, Tammy Kang, Tara Everett, Taylor Ottesen, Tiana DiMasi, Tien Nguyen, Toi Harris, Tzu-An Chen, Vicki Mercado, Victoria Michael, Victoria Xie, William Simonds, Yesenya Gonzalez, Yicenia Aviles, Ynhi Thomas, and Zachary Pallister
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Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
The fourth annual summer research summit organized by the Center of Excellence (COE) in Health Equity, Training and Research, Baylor College of Medicine (BCM) was held on May 20, 2021. The theme of this year’s summit was ‘Strengthening Our Commitment to Racial and Social Justice to Improve Public Health.’ Given the ongoing pandemic, the summit was conducted virtually through digital platforms. This program was intended for both BCM and external audiences interested in advancing health equity, diversity and inclusion in healthcare among healthcare providers and trainees, biomedical scientists, social workers, nurses, individuals involved in talent acquisition and development such as hiring managers (HR professionals), supervisors, college and hospital affiliate leadership and administrators, as well as diversity and inclusion excellence practitioners. We had attendees from all regions of the United States, India, Pakistan and the Demographic Republic of the Congo. The content in this Book of Abstracts encapsulates a summary of the research efforts by the BCM COE scholars (which includes post-baccalaureate students, medical students, clinical fellows and junior faculty from BCM) as well as the external summit participants. The range of topics in this year’s summit was quite diverse encompassing disparities in relation to maternal and child health (MCH), immigrant heath, cancers, vaccination uptakes and COVID-19 infections. Various solutions were ardently presented to address these disparities including community engagement and partnerships, improvement in health literacy and development of novel technologies and therapeutics. With this summit, BCM continues to build on its long history of educational outreach initiatives to promote diversity in medicine by focusing on programs aimed at increasing the number of diverse and highly qualified medical professionals ready to introduce effective and innovative approaches to reduce or eliminate health disparities. These programs will improve information resources, clinical education, curricula, research and cultural competence as they relate to minority health issues and social determinants of health. The summit received very positive response in terms of zealous participation and outstanding evaluations; and overall, it was a great success. Copyright © 2021 Lopez et al. Published by Global Health and Education Projects, Inc. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License CC BY 4.0.
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- 2021
3. Prenatal stress affects placental cytokines and neurotrophins, commensal microbes, and anxiety-like behavior in adult female offspring
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Sydney Fisher, Michael T. Bailey, Lena Shay, Aditi Vadodkar Palkar, Tamar L. Gur, Vanessa A. Varaljay, and Scot E. Dowd
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0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Offspring ,Placenta ,Interleukin-1beta ,Immunology ,Gut–brain axis ,Anxiety ,Biology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,0302 clinical medicine ,Pregnancy ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Nerve Growth Factors ,Microbiome ,Symbiosis ,Inflammation ,Brain-derived neurotrophic factor ,Endocrine and Autonomic Systems ,Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor ,Gastrointestinal Microbiome ,medicine.disease ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,Pregnancy Complications ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,Prenatal stress ,Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects ,Cytokines ,Encephalitis ,Female ,Inflammation Mediators ,Stress, Psychological ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Recent studies demonstrate that exposure to stress changes the composition of the intestinal microbiota, which is associated with development of stress-induced changes to social behavior, anxiety, and depression. Stress during pregnancy has also been related to the emergence of these disorders; whether commensal microbes are part of a maternal intrauterine environment during prenatal stress is not known. Here, we demonstrate that microbiome changes are manifested in the mother, and also found in female offspring in adulthood, with a correlation between stressed mothers and female offspring. Alterations in the microbiome have been shown to alter immune responses, thus we examined cytokines in utero. IL-1β was increased in placenta and fetal brain from offspring exposed to the prenatal stressor. Because IL-1β has been shown to prevent induction of brain derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), we examined BDNF and found a reduction in female placenta and adult amygdala, suggesting in utero impact on neurodevelopment extending into adulthood. Furthermore, gastrointestinal microbial communities were different in adult females born from stressed vs. non-stressed pregnancies. Adult female offspring also demonstrated increased anxiety-like behavior and alterations in cognition, suggesting a critical window where stress is able to influence the microbiome and the intrauterine environment in a deleterious manner with lasting behavioral consequences. The microbiome may be a key link between the intrauterine environment and adult behavioral changes.
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- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. 740. Prenatal Stress Alters Intrauterine Environment and Contributes to Adult Microbiome and Behavioral Changes
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Lena Shay, Michael T. Bailey, Sydney Fisher, Vannessa Varaljay, Tamar L. Gur, and Aditi Vadodkar
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Prenatal stress ,Physiology ,Microbiome ,Biology ,Biological Psychiatry - Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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