RESE ARCH
However, women with irritable bowel syndrome appear to have more severe abdominal pain than men when they’re under stress. An OU College of Medicine researcher is moving closer to understanding why, and the National Institutes of Health recently validated the promise of her work with a $1.3 million grant. Beverley Greenwood-Van Meerveld, Ph.D., a professor in the Department of Physiology and a Senior Veterans Administration Career Scientist, has devoted much of her research career to the connection between emotional stress and gastrointestinal problems. Each discovery has served as a stepping stone to another, more specific research project, such as her current work, which seeks to identify mechanisms in the brain that make women with irritable bowel syndrome more susceptible to abdominal pain than men when under stress. “IBS is a difficult condition because along with abnormal bowel habits, people have abdominal pain, often in conjunction with anxiety and depression,” she said. “People feel miserable and there’s nothing that can really treat the pain. While it’s not a disease that will lead to death, it affects quality of life and leads to lost work days. The financial burden to society is huge, and it’s one of the most common disorders that influence women’s work productivity. “The research question we are asking now is, why are females more vulnerable to abdominal pain? Our hypothesis is that there is an epigenetic change in specific brain nuclei in females,” she said. “Once we know that, we can potentially direct therapies to treat stress-induced pain. Because we have both male and female research models, we can compare and look for molecular mechanisms of coping vs. vulnerability.” Greenwood-Van Meerveld’s previous research has built the foundation for her current project. Thus far, her research has demonstrated that males with IBS who are exposed to chronic stress as adults experience increased abdominal pain. Females in the same scenario experience even greater pain. In addition, she studies different types of stress and how they affect both males and females with IBS. Her previous research has demonstrated that when exposed to early-life stress that was predictable, both males and females coped well when they encountered stress again in adulthood. However, when the early-life stress was unpredictable, females were far more likely to have pain when they experienced stress again as adults, while males remained resilient. Her current project, which seeks to identify and compare the mechanisms of stress-induced pain between males and females, is a step closer to potentially devising a solution. “We know that early-life stress is a risk factor for the development of irritable bowel syndrome later in life,” Greenwood-Van Meerveld said. “But, because research has traditionally used male research models, we need a better understanding of the connection between the brain and the gastrointestinal tract in women.”
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Amy Cohn, Ph.D.
Tobacco Regulatory Science Researcher Earns Grant to Study Role of Menthol in Smoking Habits In 2009, the Food and Drug Administration banned numerous cigarette flavors, from chocolate to cherry to cinnamon, in an effort to decrease their attractiveness to young people. But it did not ban menthol flavoring. Now, the FDA is considering whether to ban the minty flavor, and a researcher at OU Health Stephenson Cancer Center is conducting a study that will help inform that decision. Tobacco regulatory science researcher Amy Cohn, Ph.D., received a $1.3 million grant from the National Institutes of Health and the FDA Center for Tobacco Products for her study, which will investigate the role of menthol flavoring in smoking habits among young adults. The study will build
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