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No.
Grafton, Mass – Cynthia Theodos,
Ph.D., an assistant professor of Biomedical Sciences, has received
a one and a half million dollar research grant from the National
Institutes of Health (NIH) which could lead to life-saving health
protocols for AIDS patients. Theodos, an immunologist who has a
particular interest in studying immune regulation of parasitic infections,
will be collaborating with researchers at the New England Regional
Primate Research Center to identify changes in the immune system
that result in the development of the gastrointestinal illness,
chronic cryptosporidiosis, in individuals with AIDS.
Caused
by the parasite Cryptosporidium parvum, this chronic gastrointestinal
illness can be life threatening in AIDS patients due to their compromised
immune systems. “By understanding the changes in the immune system
that result in the development of chronic cryptosporidiosis, we
will be better able to design effective immunotheraputic approaches
to eliminate the parasite from the body,” said Theodos, who will
be conducting the research over the next four years. To date, there
are no existing drugs which are effective in destroying the parasite.
    

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