CHoMI Hosts Annual Symposium
The 2024 CHoMI Symposium, held on October 15th in the Great Hall of the Trent Semans Center at Duke Universit
Gusa Featured in "Duke Today"
Climate change has the potential to make fungi even more hazardous to our health, according to research at Duke.
Evon DeBose-Scarlett Wins Best Presentation Award at HHT Conference
MGM student Evon DeBose-Scarlett's abstract was chosen for an oral presentation at the 15th Hereditary Hemorrhagic Telangiectasia International Scientif
Heitman Elected to National Academy of Medicine
Paola Ramos Irizarry Wins Best Poster Award at ISFUS 2024
Paola Ramos Irizarry, 3rd-year MGM student in the Gusa Lab, won a Best Poster Award and $200 at the
Evon DeBose-Scarlett in the Marchuk Lab is Closing in on the Causes of a Dangerous Bleeding Disorder
Hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia (HHT) is an inherited disorder in the blood vessels that can lead to a range of complications, including bleeding disorders and abnormal vascular structures in
Letourneau, David Explore How Gut Microbes May Help Chew Your Food
Duke researchers are exploring how the human gut microbiome affects digestion and fecal particle size.
Alumna Yen-Ping Hsueh, PhD, Appointed Director at Max Planck Institute in Tübingen, Germany
The Max Planck Institute in Tübingen, Germany, has announced the appointment of Duke alumna Yen-Ping Hsueh,
Lan Earns Harrington Discovery Institute Award
Congratulations to MGM faculty Li Lan, M.D., Ph.D., on being recognized by the Harrington Discovery Institute's Therapeutics Development Center thr