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One or more keywords matched the following properties of Appleyard, Caroline
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overview Caroline B. Appleyard, PhD is a Professor in the Department of Basic Sciences (Physiology Division) and Internal Medicine at Ponce Health Sciences University (PHSU) - Ponce Research Institute. She obtained her Bachelor’s degree in Pharmacology from the University of Edinburgh, Scotland before completing her doctoral studies at the University of Southampton, England. She then gained extensive experience in the field of gastrointestinal inflammation, through her post-doctoral studies at the University of Calgary, Canada and at the University of South Dakota. Her current studies center on the interactions between inflammatory mediators, microflora, and behavior, in the pathogenesis and exacerbation of inflammatory conditions of the intestine. She has developed several animal models to study these conditions and help elucidate the neuro-immune mechanisms involved with a view to developing complementary therapies. Dr. Appleyard strongly believes that mentoring and exposure to training, and learning from others experiences will help to ensure that women and minorities stay in science. At PHSU she is heavily involved in scientific training in her capacity as Program Director of the NIGMS RISE graduate training program, and co-leader for the Research Education Core of the U54 PSM-Moffitt Cancer Center partnership, and this extends to her involvement in mentoring programs at the national level. Most recently she was recognized at the national level becoming the Inaugural recipient of the A. Clifford Barger Underrepresented Minority Mentorship Award from the American Physiological Society. She regularly reviews for academic journals and funding agencies and has coordinated several scientific workshops and meetings. She is an active member of several professional societies including the American Physiological Society (currently Chair of the Career Opportunities in Physiology Committee; Past-President of the Puerto Rico Physiological Society), the American Gastroenterology Association, the American Association for Cancer Research and the Association for Women In Science.
One or more keywords matched the following items that are connected to Appleyard, Caroline
Item TypeName
Grant Physical activity as a therapeutic intervention in endometriosis
Grant Stress: Potential Impact on an Animal Model of Endometriosis
Academic Article Pretreatment with the probiotic VSL#3 delays transition from inflammation to dysplasia in a rat model of colitis-associated cancer.
Academic Article Stress exacerbates endometriosis manifestations and inflammatory parameters in an animal model.
Academic Article Immunohistochemical expression of SP-NK-1R-EGFR pathway and VDR in colonic inflammation and neoplasia.
Academic Article Colonic macrophage polarization in homeostasis, inflammation, and cancer.
Academic Article Adoptive Transfer of Dendritic Cells Expressing Fas Ligand Modulates Intestinal Inflammation in a Model of Inflammatory Bowel Disease.
Academic Article The Probiotic VSL#3 Modulates Colonic Macrophages, Inflammation, and Microflora in Acute Trinitrobenzene Sulfonic Acid Colitis.
Academic Article Influence of Stress on the Vitamin D-Vitamin D Receptor System, Macrophages, and the Local Inflammatory Milieu in Endometriosis.
Academic Article Temporal changes in colonic vascular architecture and inflammatory mediator levels in animal models of colitis.
Academic Article Effect of bacterial chemotactic peptides on intestinal inflammation in animal models of acute and chronic "relapsed" colitis.
Academic Article Molecular profiling of a rat model of colitis: validation of known inflammatory genes and identification of novel disease-associated targets.
Academic Article Prolonged chronic inflammation progresses to dysplasia in a novel rat model of colitis-associated colon cancer.
Academic Article Chronic inflammation alters the contribution of neurokinin receptor subtypes to epithelial function in rat colon.
Concept Inflammation
Concept Inflammation Mediators
Academic Article TNF-alpha facilitates inflammation-induced glucocorticoid secretion in rats with biliary obstruction.
Academic Article Persistent epithelial dysfunction and bacterial translocation after resolution of intestinal inflammation.
Academic Article Journal of Hepatology
Academic Article Metabolomics in endometriosis: challenges and perspectives for future studies.
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  • Inflammation
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