ALS Center of Excellence https://www.umich-als.org Pranger ALS Clinic Wed, 03 Aug 2022 15:08:34 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.3.2 https://www.umich-als.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/cropped-download-32x32.png ALS Center of Excellence https://www.umich-als.org 32 32 159626766 Dr. Feldman Given Highest University of Michigan Honor https://www.umich-als.org/dr-feldman-given-highest-university-of-michigan-honor/ Wed, 27 Jul 2022 14:55:58 +0000 https://www.umich-als.org/?p=1915

The University Record announced that ALS Center of Excellence Director Eva Feldman, M.D., Ph.D., received the Distinguished University Professorship, along with four of her U-M colleagues.

Dr. Feldman now adds the James W. Albers Distinguished University Professor of Neurology to her growing number of impressive titles and accolades.  Below is the announcement in The University Record:

logo for the University of Michigan's The University Record

By Ann Zaniewski

Five University of Michigan faculty members have been recognized for their outstanding teaching and service with one of U-M’s most prestigious honors: the Distinguished University Professorship.

The Board of Regents approved the appointments July 21. They begin Sept. 1, last throughout the recipient’s period of active service at the university and may be retained after retirement.

Each professorship bears a name determined by the appointed professor in consultation with his or her dean. Newly appointed Distinguished University Professors are invited to give an inaugural lecture.

The Board of Regents established the Distinguished University Professorships in 1947 to recognize senior faculty members with exceptional scholarly or creative achievements, national and international reputations for academic excellence and superior teaching, mentoring and service records.

The 2022 Distinguished University Professors are:

portrait of Dr. Eva Feldman in her lab

Eva L. Feldman

• Eva L. Feldman, the James W. Albers Distinguished University Professor of Neurology. Her current title is the Russell N. DeJong Professor of Neurology, and professor of neurology in the Medical School.

In their recommendation letter to the regents, Laurie K. McCauley, provost and executive vice president for academic affairs, and Michael Solomon, Rackham Graduate School dean and vice provost for academic affairs, said Feldman is an internationally acclaimed clinician-scientist and leader in health care and academic medicine.

She conducts seminal research on understanding and treating complications of diabetes and obesity, and on determining the mechanisms and treatment strategies for neurological disorders such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and Alzheimer’s disease.

“Professor Feldman is a gifted educator and mentor who teaches fellows and residents and imparts her extraordinary clinical expertise to the next generation of health care providers. … In particular, she is an inspiration and strong advocate for women scientists and clinicians,” they wrote.

Hosagrahar V. Jagadish

• Hosagrahar V. Jagadish, the Edgar F. Codd Distinguished University Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science. His current title is the Bernard A. Galler Collegiate Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science and professor of electrical engineering and computer science in the College of Engineering.

Jagadish is a computer scientist who has made important contributions in the development of database systems. He is one of the nation’s most visible and influential researchers in the interdisciplinary field of data science, which uses complex machine-learning algorithms and other methods to derive meaningful information from vast volumes of structured and unstructured data. In addition, he has developed novel structures and algorithms to handle new types of data.

“His many data science innovations provide wider access to better information and have had an impact across a broad range of disciplines, including social work, medicine, finance, transportation and music,” Solomon and McCauley said.

Edward Webb Keane Jr.

• Edward Webb Keane Jr., the George Herbert Mead Distinguished University Professor of Anthropology. His current title is the George Herbert Mead Collegiate Professor of Anthropology and professor of anthropology in LSA.

Keane is a sociocultural anthropologist whose research and writing on semiotics, comparative religion, cultural systems and ethics has influenced many scholarly fields, including linguistic anthropology, history, religious studies, cultural studies, social theory, philosophy and social psychology. He investigates fundamental questions about religion, personhood, ethics and exchange, and how those interconnected domains relate to language.

In their recommendation letter, Solomon and McCauley said Keane’s 2016 book, “Ethical Life: Its Natural and Social Histories,” was “widely hailed as a masterful achievement.”

“The fresh analysis and insights that he develops in his work shed light on the ways that

ordinary people grapple with philosophical questions in their everyday lives and have stimulated new paths of investigation in social science and humanistic fields,” they said.

Peggy S. McCracken

• Peggy S. McCracken, the Anna Julia Cooper Distinguished University Professor of Medieval French Literature. Her current title is the Mary Fair Croushore Professor, Domna C. Stanton Collegiate Professor of French, Women’s and Gender Studies and Comparative Literature, and professor of French, of women’s and gender studies, and of comparative literature in LSA.

McCracken is an internationally recognized scholar of medieval French literature and culture. Solomon and McCauley said her 2017 book, “In the Skin of a Beast: Sovereignty and Animality in Medieval France,” was “field-defining.” It examines medieval Latin and French vernacular fictional writing to explore how literary texts use accounts of human-animal encounters to raise questions about mastery, submission and inferiority.

“Professor McCracken’s scholarly work also encompasses wide-ranging examinations of literature and culture, and she has achieved distinction in her contributions to understandings of issues that lie at the heart of both medieval and contemporary cultures,” they said.

Kamal Sarabandi

• Kamal Sarabandi, the Fawwaz T. Ulaby Distinguished University Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science. His current title is the Rufus S. Teesdale Professor of Engineering, and professor of electrical engineering and computer science in the College of Engineering.

Sarabandi is a leading researcher in the science of radar remote sensing and in the development of technologies that have enabled its use in many applications.

“Professor Sarabandi has led and shaped the field of radar remote sensing for the past 30 years,” Solomon and McCauley said. “His many pioneering contributions include models for the propagation and calibration of electromagnetic waves, innovative designs for miniaturized antennae designs, and the development of algorithms for mobile radars that allow the creation of highly detailed two- and three-dimension images of landscapes and other objects.

“Through these and other path-breaking innovations, he has been the world leader in the development of transformational technology whose impact is being felt in research, industry and government.”

See the article on The University Record website
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Promising Results from Clinical Drug Trial Covered by The Wall Street Journal https://www.umich-als.org/promising-results-from-clinical-drug-trial-covered-by-the-wall-street-journal/ Fri, 20 Dec 2019 15:28:39 +0000 https://www.umich-als.org/?p=1336 U-M’s ALS Center of Excellence is a Research Site for the Amylyx Pharmaceuticals Drug

Preliminary data showing an Amylyx Pharmaceuticals drug as a promising new therapy in slowing the progression of ALS was published in The Wall Street Journal Today:

“The drug’s maker, closely held Amylyx Pharmaceuticals Inc., is releasing only the barest outlines of the mid-stage trial for now, as researchers continue to analyze the results. The drug slowed the rate of ALS’s progression in patients as measured by a widely used scale, said the researchers and the company’s founders.

‘We’re just another step closer to hopefully stopping this illness,” said Merit Cudkowicz, who heads the Healey Center for ALS at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston and helped design and coordinate the study.’”  See The Wall Street Journal article HERE.

The ALS Center of Excellence at Michigan Medicine is currently one of the research sites gathering clinical data.

While the trial is ongoing, it is no longer enrolling new participants.

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#IceALS RECAP: Remembering Scott Matzka & a Big Ten Showdown Bringing Together Old Friends https://www.umich-als.org/iceals-recap-remembering-scott-matzka-and-a-big-ten-showdown-bringing-together-old-friends/ Wed, 11 Dec 2019 18:32:15 +0000 https://www.umich-als.org/?p=1296 Friday, December 6 marked the 4th annual U-M Men’s Hockey ALS Awareness Game – #IceALS. It was also the first anniversary of the passing of Scott Matzka, who inspired the event. Matzka was a member of the 1998 national championship team and it was his former head coach, Hall of Famer Red Berenson, who began the yearly #IceALS campaign after finding out about the diagnosis of his player. Matzka and his family have since inspired many each year in support of this game.

Dr. Zachary Simmons, Dr. Eva Felman and Dr. James Albers at the 2019 U-M Hockey ALS Awareness Game

Drs. Zachary Simmons, Eva Feldman & James Albers at #IceALS 2019

This year the game offered a Big Ten showdown versus Penn State, which also brought together the two schools’ ALS Center Directors, who are longtime friends and colleagues. In fact, Penn State Health’s Zachary Simmons, M.D., served as Michigan Medicine’s Eva Feldman’s, M.D., Ph.D., fellow at U-M in the early 90’s.

FEATURE STORY I DISCUSSION ON ALS: In the week before the game, Drs. Feldman and Simmons sat down to reminisce about their time together in the 90s, and where ALS research is headed today.

 

To celebrate the legacy and life of Scott Matzka, his two children, Owen and Reese, dropped the ceremonial puck, flanked by Dr. Feldman and Stephen Goutman, M.D. Fox Sports 1, which nationally televised the game, captured this moving sight and spoke about the importance of the game on this clip:

“[Coach] Mel Pearson said: ‘Some moments are bigger than hockey, they’re bigger than Michigan hockey or bigger than the game. That was one of them.’”—speaking about comments from current U-M Head Coach Mel Pearson, who initially recruited Matzka to U-M, after Matzka visited the locker room following U-M’s win last year, five weeks before his death.

Just as Coach Pearson aptly noted, this game was about so much more than hockey. During the first intermission, the voice of Michigan Hockey Al Randall sat down with Dr. Feldman:

During second intermission, Dr. Feldman was also interviewed on the big screen about the importance of #IceALS and the progress of ALS research:

The Monday after the game, Dr. Goutman, visited Sam Webb and Ira Weintraub on WTKA AM 1050 to recap this special event, including the experience of escorting Matzka’s kids for the puck drop, which included sharing a very special moment with Owen Matzka:

“His son looked up at me and pointed out the 1998 championship title and just said: ‘that’s my dad’s team!’ He was just smiling and having a great time.”  That’s really what it is all about.

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