Repost- Faces of Drug Abuse Research: Yasmin L Hurd, Ph.D.
February 5, 2013
This first went up on the old SB blog in Feb of 2009.
Yasmin L. Hurd, Ph.D. is Professor of Pharmacology and Systems Therapeutics as well as Psychiatry at Mt. Sinai Medical Center (PubMed; Hurd Lab; Department; Research Crossroads) .
As is overviewed on the “research” tab of her webpage, Professor Hurd has longstanding interests in mesocorticolimbic areas that are affected by drugs of abuse. Her areas of concentration include the in vivo neurochemical responses to drugs, the influence of drugs on fetal brain development and the molecular and biochemical changes that might be associated with dependence.
Professor Hurd obtained her doctorate in 1989 from the Karolinska…Okay, right there your brain should go ‘click‘.
The application of intra cerebral microdialysis techniques to neuropharmacological investigations was developed in large part by Urban Ungerstedt at the Karolinska Institutet (PubMed) with things really heating up in the early to mid eighties. Professor Hurd was working with Ungerstedt as a graduate student in the mid to late eighties, producing some of the earlier work on dopaminergic responses to psychomotor stimulant drugs of abuse. These studies remained a continuing theme of her work through postdoctoral training and her independent research career. It is overwhelmingly likely that if you work with in vivo neurochemical responses to drugs of abuse you cite Professor Hurd….frequently.
The developmental work follows a plan that is pretty easy to grasp, and is something in which drug abuse researchers are very much interested. If kids are exposed in utero via maternal drug use, does this leave them at increased risk for cognitive or behavioral problems including drug use later in life? Does drug exposure during the critical adolescent brain development windows make one more likely to go on to develop problematic drug use? Professor Hurd’s work gets at lasting changes in brain function which may underlie adult behavioral phenomena associated with prior drug exposure. Parents such as myself pay particular attention to the adolescent work, you may be assured.
Dr. Hurd’s molecular studies have mostly been related to neuropeptide regulation and expression in the wake of both neonatal and adult exposure to abused drugs. The most sustained research focii have been heroin, cocaine and cannabis.
Wow, that was an interesting review to do- obviously I only write a minimal overview for the general audience but for those of you in the field, click the PubMed link at the top. Professor Hurd has accomplished a LOT in her career to date an although I’ve known the name quite well from her work I don’t know that I’ve ever sat down and reviewed her entire body of papers. I mention from time to time that the drug abuse fields are not what you would think of as saturated with the latest and greatest molecular and genetic techniques. Professor Hurd has consistently been at the leading edge of the most neurobiological side of the drug abuse fields from graduate training through her current position. One cannot help but think of her as a lioness of our field. Thank you, Professor Hurd, for your sustained commitment to furthering understanding of the effects of recreationally abused drugs.
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Update (02/09/09): A comment over at Young Female Scientist offers a personal perspective. PainMan says:
Drugmonkey was recently profiling Yasmin Hurd. I’ve met her and this woman is a Superstar’s Superstar. I mean The Total Package. she’s black AND female, but after spending ten minutes with her you forget that.
This series of entries (Carl L. Hart, Ph.D.; Chanda K. Akins, Ph.D.) was motivated by DNLee’s call for a new blog Carnival concerned with Diversity in Science. Submit your entries here.
February 6, 2013 at 9:36 am
Using microdialysis in that way is very impressive – def. not something I would have come up with. Using that sort of application, I hope, will become more widespread with scientists like forensic toxicologists looking for drug abuse information. Thanks Dr. Hurd.
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February 6, 2013 at 10:37 am
What a fantastic scientist and role model for young scientists!
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April 24, 2013 at 5:35 pm
An impressive share! I’ve just forwarded this onto a coworker who had been doing a little homework on this. And he in fact bought me lunch because I discovered it for him… lol. So allow me to reword this…. Thanks for the meal!! But yeah, thanx for spending time to talk about this issue here on your web site.
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June 30, 2013 at 3:46 am
why do you allow spam?
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June 30, 2013 at 6:41 am
“Allow”?
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