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NIH funds $1.5M for research into prediction of stroke risk in pediatric patients with sickle cell disease
Friday, October 1, 2010
By: News -Medical
News-Medical.net
A researcher from the biomedical engineering department
operated by Georgia Tech and Emory University has received a $1.5 million NIH
Director's New Innovator Award to support a project aimed at reducing the
incidence of stroke in children with sickle cell disease. Manu Platt, an
assistant professor in the Wallace H. Coulter Department of Biomedical
Engineering, will use the National Institutes of Health (NIH) funding to
develop models for identifying which children with the disease are at risk for
stroke.
The first case of sickle cell disease was identified in 1910
and today it affects more than 70,000 Americans. It is seen mostly in persons
of African descent, but also in individuals of Middle Eastern, Mediterranean,
Central and South American, and Asian Indian heritage. Approximately 10 percent
of children with sickle cell disease suffer a stroke. Having experienced one
stroke, they are at high risk of having another.
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