dr. N. (Niels) Eijkelkamp - UMC Utrecht
Por um escritor misterioso
Descrição
lt;p>Niels Eijkelkamp (18-07-1980) is PI at the laboratory of translational immunology. His research focusses on chronic pain, a major debilitating disease that affects >20% of the population. He aims to unravel mechanisms and to identify novel treatments of chronic pain by elucidating the role of the immune system and its interactions with the nervous system in chronic pain. His group is one of the very few groups in the Netherlands studying the mechanisms underlying pain. </p>
<p>His group uses different experimental approaches to unravel molecular pain mechansims and identify novel treatment approaches with the ultimate aim to translate these basic research findings to chronic pain patients such as children with Juvenile Idiopathic arthritis and adults with chronic inflammatory disease and osteoarthtis.</p>
<p>Eijkelkamp graduated in 2003 with honors in Medical Biology (University of Utrecht). In 2009 he completed his PhD under supervision of Dr. Heijnen with his thesis entitled ‘GRK gatekeeper of pain and inflammation’. Prior to his PhD he worked for 1 year on stress and wound healing in the team led by Dr. Sheridan at the Ohio State University. As PostDoc he had a joint appointment at the UMCU and University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign to work on the role of GRKs in pain. Finally, he worked for 2 years on sensory transduction and signalling pathways in chronic pain in the laboratory of Dr. Wood at the University College London. Since 2013 he started his own group at the UMCU.</p>
Increased visceral sensitivity to capsaicin after DSS-induced colitis in mice: spinal cord c-Fos expression and behavior
Anti-GD2 IgA kills tumors by neutrophils without antibody-associated pain in the preclinical treatment of high-risk neuroblastoma
JCI - Human IAPP is a contributor to painful diabetic peripheral neuropathy
Nico WULFFRAAT, Head of Department Pediatric immunology, Prof MD, University Medical Center Utrecht, Utrecht, UMC Utrecht, Division of Pediatrics
Study unravels molecular basis of chronic pain transition
Child research
News – PIANO, a H2020 MSCA ITN project
Frontiers Mitochondria and sensory processing in inflammatory and neuropathic pain
prof. dr. E.M. (Elise) van de Putte - Het WKZ
Inflammation-induced mitochondrial and metabolic disturbances in sensory neurons control the switch from acute to chronic pain