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NSF grant will help
Wayne State University
professors’ mathematical modeling of
fatty liver predictors
Detroit, January 20, 2012: Predicting problems in one of the
body's most complex organs soon may become easier because of
work being done by Wayne State University researchers.
Howard Matthew and Yinlun Huang, professors of chemical
engineering and materials science, recently received a $550,000
grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF) to develop a
mathematical model of liver metabolism that can be used to
analyze and more effectively predict responses to possible
treatments for hepatic steatosis, more commonly known as fatty
liver.
The condition affects between 15 and 20 percent of the U.S.
population and often is a precursor to more serious problems.
Accumulation of fat droplets, or lipids, inside liver cells is a
key characteristic in many of the organ’s failure modes.
Increased lipid accumulation is usually the first symptom to
appear before a measurable dysfunction occurs.
On the Internet:
http://www.media.wayne.edu/2012/01/19/nsf-grant-will-help-wayne-state-university
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