Media releases

  • Participants needed for Brock research linking allergies, asthma to childhood experiences

    MEDIA RELEASE: April 1 2024 – R0042

    The composition of good microbes harmoniously living in our bodies could be shaped by early childhood experiences, one of several physiological connections a Brock team is exploring in their research on allergies.

    Associate Professors of Health Sciences Adam MacNeil and Karen Patte are heading up a team exploring whether early life events and upbringing contribute to the development of allergies and asthma.

    But they need a few hundred research participants of diverse backgrounds to be able to fully explore the topic.

    The researchers are looking for people ages 18 to 25 years in the Niagara area, with no allergy or asthma diagnosis necessary.

    Participants would need to answer online questionnaires and come to Brock to undergo physical measurements and provide bodily samples.

    One of these samples is stool, which MacNeil says holds valuable clues to connections among the brain, gut and immune system.

    “If we’re able to identify that a particular species of microbe in the gastrointestinal tract could influence the likelihood of developing allergies or asthma, we can potentially intervene, perhaps with the development of a screening tool,” says MacNeil.

    “We encourage people not to be put off by this part of the research,” he says. “The collection and submission process takes place at home and is easy and discreet. These small samples will give the research team a great deal of information.”

    Research participants will receive $50 for their involvement as well as a chance to win an iPad.

    For more information, and to sign up to participate, contact Allergy Asthma and Adversity Study Co-ordinator Katie Hunter.

    Patte, Canada Research Chair in Child Health Equity and Inclusion, says about 100 people have participated in their research so far — an excellent early response — but many more participants are needed, especially males who’ve been underrepresented thus far.

    “We’re also looking at many different factors that could be protective against the development of allergies and asthma, such as diet, physical activity and social supports,” she says. “Our research could contribute to possible medical, psychological or social interventions.”

    MacNeil and Patte’s first-of-its-kind study explores if and how experiences in childhood hypersensitize the immune system and set the stage for a lifetime of suffering with allergies.

    They are co-leading the seven-member team that was awarded the Canadian government’s New Frontiers in Research Fund (NFRF) in 2021 for their project “Allergenicity from Childhood Adversity.”

    The other team members include Professors of Health Sciences Deborah O’Leary and Terrance Wade, Assistant Professor of Health Sciences Valerie Michaelson, and Associate Professor of Kinesiology and Canada Research Chair in Tissue Re-modelling and Plasticity throughout the Lifespan Val Fajardo.

    “Allergy prevalence is rising rapidly and understanding why requires new transdisciplinary thinking, outside the box,” MacNeil says. “Many of the contributing factors remain elusive.”

    Patte says the team is “taking a unique approach by linking sociology and psychology with immunology and physiology — fields that seldom collaborate — to help determine the mechanisms linking childhood adversity and allergies.”

     

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews:

     

    * Maryanne St. Denis, Manager, Content and Communications, Brock University mstdenis@brocku.ca or 905-246-0256

     

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    Categories: Media releases

  • Brock public lectures to educate on eclipses, sun and moon phases

    MEDIA RELEASE: March 28 2024 – R0041

    Curious about the cosmos? Wondering why a total solar eclipse in Niagara is such a rare sight?

    Two Brock University professors are giving free public lectures next week about the celestial spectacle and the significance of lunar and solar cycles.

    Assistant Professor of Physics Barak Shoshany will present All About Eclipses on Friday, April 5 from 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. in David S. Howes Theatre. The presentation will discuss the differences between solar and lunar eclipses, the types of solar eclipses and why a total solar eclipse is so rare. He will also explain what people can expect to see during the upcoming total solar eclipse on Monday, April 8 and how to view the eclipse safely.

    Shoshany says his lecture will present important concepts related to eclipses in a way anyone can understand.

    “People who attend the lecture will be able to enjoy the most optimal and safe experience during this exciting once-in-a-lifetime event and share what they learned with others,” he says.

    Complimentary ISO-certified eclipse viewing glasses will be distributed to 50 randomly selected people who attend the lecture.

    On the theme of the sun and the moon, Professor of Mathematics Henryk Fukś will present Solar and lunar cycles in the construction of the Gregorian Calendar on Thursday, April 4 from 1 to 2 p.m. in South Block room STH 216. The presentation will discuss the role mathematics played in creating the calendar and formulating the algorithm for determining the phase of the moon on a given day.

    “The calendar we use today is based on the cycles of the observed motion of our sun, but it isn’t as widely known that there is a lunar part to our calendar,” says Fukś. “The annual dates for the Good Friday statutory holiday and Easter Sunday, which change every year, are determined by the phases of the moon.”

    Both lectures are free and open to the Brock and Niagara communities, and no advanced knowledge of astronomy, mathematics or physics is needed. More information on each event can be found on ExperienceBU.

    The community is also invited to Brock’s Eclipse on the Escarpment event on Monday, April 8, which features more than a dozen free educational exhibits in Ian Beddis Gymnasium and a viewing of the total solar eclipse on Alumni Field.

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews:

    * Maryanne St. Denis, Manager, Content and Communications, Brock University mstdenis@brocku.ca or 905-246-0256

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    Categories: Media releases