If you have an older loved one in your life, whether it be your mother, grandfather or another relative, serious health conditions can severely limit your relationship with them. One of the issues is neuroinflammation, which is a complex process involving numerous ailments, including depression, obesity, hypertension, Alzheimer’s disease, stroke and more.
To better understand these illnesses, Georgia State University is announcing the Center for Neuroinflammation and Cardiometabolic Diseases, a research center focused on studying inflammation in the brain and its effects.
The center’s founding director will be Javier Stern, who joined GSU in 2017 as a leading expert in neuroinflammation.
“Under Stern’s leadership, the Center will unite faculty in areas of existing research strengths, including neuroscience, immunology, cardiovascular health and obesity,” James Weyhenmeyer, vice president for research and economic development at Georgia State, said in a press release. “In doing so, we have the potential to improve scientific understanding of critical disorders and how they develop.”
A priority for the center will be turning lab discoveries into clinical tools, GSU said.
“The translational approach is important because we’re tackling some very important questions related to diseases that are strongly prevalent not only in the state of Georgia but across the country,” Stern said.
For more information, visit the new research center online.