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Pharmacology and Toxicology was established as a department at the Georgia Health
Sciences University in 1943. The Department has a rich history of accomplishments
in fundamental research including the discovery of the adrenergic receptor subtypes-alpha
and beta- which has lead to the development of many drugs used in the treatment of
cardiovascular disease. Our research programs focus on cardiovascular studies and
neuroscience studies.
The field of pharmacology originally developed as a means to discover how the age-old
remedies and poisons exert their effects on man. Pharmacology as a modern discipline
provides the groundwork for discovery and development of our future generation of
therapeutics. The scope of pharmacology has expanded greatly over the last decade
to incorporate many new approaches such as computer-assisted drug design, genetic
screens, protein engineering, and the use of novel drug delivery vehicles including
viruses and artificial cells.
Our society needs pharmacologists who understand the bases of modern therapeutics
for careers within academic, pharmaceutical and governmental laboratories to study
and develop tomorrow's drugs. Our fifteen departmental faculty members work with approximately
50 graduate students, postdoctoral fellows and staff on a variety of research areas
that include cardiac, vascular, and pulmonary diseases, and schizophrenia, learning
and memory, neuroprotection and drug abuse. Our experimental approaches range from
the gene to the whole animal level.
News Makers |
2012 Armand M. Karow Award The Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology has presented the 2012 Armand M. Karow Award for outstanding graduate student to Ms. Folami Lamoke, who is seen holding her award in the picture left. Ms. Lamoke is a third-year Ph.D. student conducting herdissertation research on the pharmacology of the retina in the laboratory of Dr. Manuela Bartoli (pictured on the right). This prestigious award was presented by Dr. R. William Caldwell, Chairman of Pharmacology and Toxicology (pictured on the left). Armand M. Karow, Ph.D., was born in New Orleans, La. He graduated from Duke University and earned a doctorate in Pharmacology from the University of Mississippi Medical Center. He joined the faculty of the Medical College of Georgia (MCG) in 1968 in the Schools of Medicine and Graduate Studies. When he retired in 1997, he was Professor of Pharmacology and Research Associate Professor of Surgery and was given the title of Professor Emeritus. He was also the Founder and Chairman Emeritus in Perpetuity of Xytex International Ltd. He was recognized as one of the world’s experts on cryopreservation of transplantable cells and tissues, and published over 100 research articles. Dr. Karow’s wife, Ramona, and his sons generously provided the endowment to fund this $5000 award in his memory. Each year a deserving doctoral student pursuing a career in Pharmacology and Toxicology will be recognized with this honor. |
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