Press Release

FSU College of Medicine Researcher Develops New Possibilities to Prevent Sudden Cardiac Death

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
 
CONTACT:
Doug Carlson, FSU College of Medicine
(850) 645-1255; doug.carlson@med.fsu.edu
 
February 2021
 
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — 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, an assistant professor of biomedical sciences at the Florida State University College of Medicine, has developed a better understanding of the pathological characteristics behind the disease, as well as promising avenues for prevention. His findings are published in the current issue of Science Translational Medicine.
 
Individuals with ACM possess a mutation causing arrhythmias, which ordinarily are non-fatal if managed and treated properly. However, Chelko shows that exercise not only amplifies those arrhythmias, but causes extensive cell death. Their only option is to avoid taking part in what should be a healthy and worthwhile endeavor: exercise.
 
“There is some awful irony in that exercise, a known health benefit for the heart, leads to cell death in ACM subjects,” Chelko said. “Now, we know that endurance exercise, in particular, leads to large-scale myocyte cell death due to mitochondrial dysfunction in those who suffer from this inherited heart disease.”
 
Several thousand mitochondria are in nearly every cell in the body, processing oxygen and converting food into energy. Considered the powerhouse of all cells (they produce 90 percent of the energy our bodies need to function properly), they also play another important role as a protective antioxidant.
 
As mitochondria fail to function properly, and myocyte cells in the heart die, healthy muscles are replaced by scar tissue and fatty cells. Eventually, the heart’s normal electrical signals are reduced to an erratic and disorganized firing of impulses from the lower chambers, leading to an inability to properly pump blood during heavy exercise. Without immediate medical treatment, death occurs within minutes.
 
Chelko’s research gets to the heart of the process involved in mitochondrial dysfunction.
 
“Ultimately, mitochondria become overwhelmed and expel ‘death signals’ that are sent to the nucleus, initiating large-scale DNA fragmentation and cell death,” Chelko said. “This novel study unravels a pathogenic role for exercise-induced, mitochondrial-mediated cell death in ACM hearts.”
 
In addition to providing a better understanding of the process involved, Chelko discovered that cell death can be prevented by inhibiting two different mitochondrial proteins. One such approach utilizes a novel targeting peptide developed for Chelko’s research by the National Research Council in Padova, Italy.
 
That discovery opens avenues for the development of new therapeutic options to prevent myocyte cell death, cardiac dysfunction and the pathological progression leading to deadly consequences for people living with ACM.
 
This research was funded by an American Heart Association Career Development Award.
 
 

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Feb 17, 2021
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
PRESS RELEASE

The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality profiled George Rust, professor in the Department of Behavioral Sciences and Social Medicine. It reads, in part, "Working in medically underserved communities revealed to George Rust, M.D., M.P.H., that care processes developed in tightly controlled research settings don’t always work in what he calls 'the messiness of the real world.' This realization led Dr. Rust to devote his career to understanding disparities and making health equity a reality for minority and disadvantaged populations."

Winter 2021

Feb 05, 2021

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Feb 10, 2021
WESH 2
PRESS RELEASE

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis announced that more than a third of all Walmart stores in Florida will begin distributing COVID-19 vaccines on Friday, Feb. 12.

"Walmarts are closer to the population that are more at risk of getting severe illness from COVID-19, those with multiple cormorbidities that would be more at risk if they came down with COVID-19," said Associate Professor Christie Alexander. "So the fact that Walmart serves those populations and those populations can get their vaccine more easily will decrease the effect on our hospital systems as well."

News of the Week

Women of Science: Answering questions about COVID-19

College of Medicine physician-faculty members Christie Alexander, Joedrecka Brown Speights and Niharika Suchak have been invited to serve as panelists during a live Zoom discussion about COVID-19 and the vaccination. The event will be hosted by 500 Women Scientists Tallahassee and co-sponsored by Big Bend Hospice, the Tallahassee Senior Center, and Elder Care Services, Inc.  The conversation will be geared toward people over age 65 and those caring for seniors. The event is free and open to all. A link to register via EventBrite is below.

COVID panel flyer

 

 

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Feb 08, 2021
Tallahassee Democrat
PRESS RELEASE

On Tuesday, Feb. 2, Florida State University in partnership with the Leon County Department of Health began offering the Tucker Center to provide vaccines to those 65 and older who had previously registered and were on a waiting list to get their first shots. James Zedaker, director of the Physician Assistant program at the College of Medicine and director of university projects for health and emergency operations, commented on the vaccination plan.

News of the Week

Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the College of Medicine's GME programs

An article from the College of Medicine was featured in the Winter 2021 edition of The Florida Pediatrician. The article titled, "Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Graduate Medical Education at the Florida State University College of Medicine," focuses on the challenges, innovations and opportunities that the pandemic brought to the college's GME programs. It was authored by Joan Meek, dean of the Orlando Regional Campus and associate dean for graduate medical education; Karen Hamad, Sarasota clerkship faculty member; FSU residency program directors Wilhelmine Wiese-Rometsch and Alfred Gitu; and resident physician and College of Medicine alumna Tatianna Pizzutto (M.D. '18).

The Florida Pediatrician is a peer reviewed journal published quarterly by the Editorial Board of the Florida Chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics. The journal includes scientific articles, case reports, legislative updates, and other information relevant to pediatricians, pediatric specialists, and pediatric allied health practitioners in Florida.

Click here to read the article