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Mar 26, 2021
People Magazine
SSTRIDE student saves baby's life after learning CPR in high school
PRESS RELEASE

Crestview High School student Savion Harris was at work at a Thai restaurant when the mother of the family-owned business came running down the stairs with her son Max in her arms, frantically yelling for someone to help.

According to WEAR, the baby had turned blue and was not breathing.

Harris, an 11th grader at Crestview, immediately jumped into action and began chest compressions on the infant. Harris received his CPR certification as part of Crestview High School's Career and Technical Education (CTE) Program. The program currently has a partnership between its medical classes and the FSU College of Medicine's SSTRIDE program (Science Students Together Reaching Instructional Diversity & Excellence).

News of the Week

Flynn to lead psychotherapy organization

Heather Flynn, professor and interim chair of the Department of Behavioral Sciences and Social Medicine, has been selected as president-elect of the International Society for Interpersonal Psychotherapy (interpersonalpsychotherapy.org)

Flynn, who also serves as director of the FSU Center for Behavioral Health Integration, has worked with the organization for many years to improve and disseminate treatment for psychiatric disorders. 

“Interpersonal psychotherapy, which has been around since the 1980s, is an evidence-based treatment that is highly effective,” Flynn said. “As a committee chair, I have developed an international certification program for both therapists and supervisors, being rolled out now worldwide.”

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Mar 24, 2021
Cardiovascular Business
PRESS RELEASE

Jose R. Pinto, associate professor of biomedical sciences at the College of Medicine teamed up with researchers from Eastern Virginia Medical School and the University of Virginia and made an important discovery regarding a tiny muscle filament in the heart.

“For decades the structure of the thin filament at this important point was unknown,” said Vitold Galkin, associate professor of physiological sciences at Eastern Virginia Medical School. “This dramatically limited our understanding of the thin filament regulation by calcium.” The research was published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

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Mar 25, 2021
Being Patient
PRESS RELEASE

A new study indicates that the brain-boosting benefits of psychological resilience — including overcoming conditions like persistent loneliness — might offset harm and ultimately lower one’s risk of developing dementia later in life, leaving people more cognitively protected than those who have never felt lonely at all. Florida State University study observed 12,030 participants over the course of 10 years and found that loneliness was linked to a 40 percent higher chance of developing dementia.

Press Release

Key Research Advance Could Spawn New Treatments for Heart Diseases

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

CONTACT:

Doug Gardner, Eastern Virginia Medical School
(757) 446-6073; gardneda@evms.edu

Bill Wellock, FSU University Communications
(850) 645-1504;
wwellock@fsu.edu

@FSUResearch

March 2021 

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Scientists peering into the beating heart have solved a decades-old, fundamental mystery about how the heart works. The revelation could herald the development of new treatments for heart diseases — the leading cause of death worldwide.

Researchers from Eastern Virginia Medical School, Florida State University and the University of Virginia have observed a tiny muscle filament during a crucial stage in a beating heart for the first time. The research was published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

The heart is a unique muscle which contracts and relaxes about once every second in most people. Each heartbeat relies on cyclical interactions between thick and thin filaments in the heart muscle — a process orchestrated by rising and falling levels of calcium, said Vitold Galkin, associate professor of physiological sciences at Eastern Virginia Medical School and an author of the study.

During the “systolic” phase, calcium binds to thin filaments and allows interactions with thick filaments to produce the force required for heart muscle to contract.

“For decades the structure of the thin filament at this important point was unknown,” Galkin said. “This dramatically limited our understanding of the thin filament regulation by calcium.”

Researchers worked for two years to tackle the technical challenges presented by the complex structure of the thin filament and the difficulty in preparing the specimen for examination.

With those challenges overcome, the team used cryo-electron microscopy to directly observe the thin filament structure as the heart contracts and beats, findings that open up a new avenue for heart disease research.

“We can now fully understand how inherited diseases of the heart affect its capability to work,” said Jose R. Pinto, associate professor of biomedical sciences at Florida State University. “Basically, we created a new structural model for the cardiac thin filament, and based on that, we can now address several existing questions about the functioning of the heart in health and disease.”

The research team’s data reveal how parts of the thin filament cooperate to transition from the diastole phase of the heartbeat — when the heart muscle is relaxed — to systole, when the heart muscle contracts and pumps blood.

“The advance in our fundamental knowledge of cardiac muscle regulation paves the way to the rational design of tailored therapeutic interventions that could potentially improve cardiac muscle function in diseased hearts,” Galkin said.

The research was groundbreaking for several reasons, said co-investigator P. Bryant Chase, a professor of biological science at Florida State University. That includes the identification of individual structures along thin filaments at three concentrations of calcium — including a previously unknown structure at systolic calcium — and the use of thin filaments from a pig heart, which is very similar in size and heart rate to a human heart.

“Our results provide a new, fundamental basis for understanding and modeling the thin filament in health and disease because a number of genetic heart diseases affect proteins of the thin filament,” he said.

This research was funded by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute.

The EVMS research team included Galkin; Cristina Risi, research scholar in physiological sciences; Ian Pepper, graduate student; Betty Belknap, research associate in physiological sciences; and Howard White, professor of Physiological Sciences. The FSU research team included Pinto, Chase and graduate student Maicon Landim-Vieira. The University of Virginia researcher was Kelly A. Dryden, associate professor of research, molecular physiology and biological physics.

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Mar 25, 2021
FSU News
PRESS RELEASE

Jose R. Pinto, associate professor of biomedical sciences at the College of Medicine teamed up with researchers from Eastern Virginia Medical School and the University of Virginia and made an important discovery regarding a tiny muscle filament in the heart.

“For decades the structure of the thin filament at this important point was unknown,” said Vitold Galkin, associate professor of physiological sciences at Eastern Virginia Medical School. “This dramatically limited our understanding of the thin filament regulation by calcium.” The research was published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Print

Mar 19, 2021
FSU News
PRESS RELEASE

A Florida State University medical student will help continue the mission of a Tallahassee physician whose life was cut tragically short.

Medical student Jimmy Brown, who grew up in the Panhandle town of Hosford (population 704), has made a lasting impression of small-town humility and compassion with the Tallahassee physician-faculty members who taught him the intricacies of patient care over the past few years.

Brown is the first recipient of the Nancy Van Vessem, M.D. Memorial Scholarship, established to honor the local health care and community leader whose life ended in a shooting at a Tallahassee yoga studio in 2018.

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Mar 23, 2021
Medical Laboratory Observer
PRESS RELEASE

Nearly a half-million people a year die from sudden cardiac death (SCD) in the U.S. — the result of malfunctions in the heart’s electrical system.

A leading cause of SCD in young athletes is arrhythmogenic cardiomyopathy (ACM), a genetic disease in which healthy heart muscle is replaced over time by scar tissue (fibrosis) and fat. Stephen Chelko, a researcher at the College of Medicine, has developed a better understanding of the pathological characteristics behind the disease, as well as promising avenues for prevention.