| « Back Spanning the Globe: Indian Physician Trades Scrubs for Diabetes ResearchBy Alicia Jacobs, Excelsior Life News Staff
“I really wanted to understand how research was done and had a fascination for studying the brain and how it affects behavior,” said Jahagirdar, today a senior research analyst for Institutional Effectiveness at Excelsior College. After moving here, she entered into research with focus on neuroscience, conducting research on animal-models – rat, genetically-modified mice, hamster brains, cell-cultures, and post-mortem human brain tissue. Jahagirdar explained her career transition from being a medical doctor to a statistical researcher, “My medical training in India helped me to be analytical and to be a better researcher. My doctoral studies in the U.S., in a quantitative field like neuroscience, have nurtured these skills, taught me how to think creatively, critique constructively, and ask questions. It is actually my doctoral studies that formally trained me in statistics. “ “As a researcher I had to dig into literature, figure out unanswered questions in the field, design experiments, collect data, analyze my data, make sense of it and present my findings to the research community and laypersons. I use all these skills day in and day out in my present job.” Jahagirdar’s research trajectory included working on doctoral thesis and multiple postdoctoral postings. Her thesis focused on helping others to understand how maternal steroid hormones like progesterone and thyroid hormones affect developing baby brains. Her thesis research findings have provided valuable insight on how normal brain development occurs and what might potentially go wrong in mental retardation. Her postdoctoral training included studying the effects of diabetes and its treatment with insulin on memory. Findings from a few of her most recent studies, funded by NIH and NSF, suggest that memory may be affected in diabetics who may have thyroid hormonal imbalances or who undergo insulin replacement therapy and suffer from moderate bouts of lowered blood glucose levels. Key findings: According to Jahagirdar, the results of these studies do have impact on individuals with diabetes.
| Media ContactsWilliam M. Stewart Mike Lesczinski Alicia Jacobs |