Michael Sangobawale
Education:
2005 |
B.A. Cognitive Neuroscience – University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA |
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2010 |
M.S. Neuroscience and Education – Teachers College, Columbia University, New York, NY |
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2016 |
Ph.D. Neuroscience – S.U.N.Y Downstate Medical Center, Brooklyn, NY |
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2016 | NRSA T32 Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Department of Neurosurgery, University of Pennsylvania | ||||
2017 | PennPORT Fellow, Department of Neurology, University of Pennsylvania |
Education:
Research Mentors: Ramon Diaz-Arrastia M.D., Ph.D. / Doug Smith M.D.
Research Topic: Use neuroimaging to assess pathological endphenotypes after TBI. My research interests primarily focus on using cerebrovascular reactivity as a biomarker of traumatic microvascular injury after moderate-severe traumatic brain injury.
Teaching Interests: Neuroscience, Neurobiology of Disease
Publications:
Sangobowale, M., Grin’kina, N., Whitney, K., Nikulina, E., St. Laurent-Ariot, K., Ho, J., Bayzan, N., Bergold, P. (2017) Minocycline plus N-acetylcysteine limits traumatic brain injury within a clinically useful time window in two animal models. Neurotrauma. In revision
M. Haber, J. James, J. Kim, Sangobowale, M. R. Irizarry, N. M. Grin’kina, A. Ramadani, and P. J. Bergold. Minocycline plus N-acteylcysteine induces remyelination, synergistically protects oligodendrocytes, and modifies neuroinflammation in a rat model of mild traumatic brain injury. Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism. 2017
Grin’kina N.M. Li, Y., Haber, M., Sangobowale, M., Nikulina, E., Le’Pre, C., El Sehamy, A.M. Ho, J.S., and P.J. Bergold. Apnea and righting reflex predict long--‐term severity in a closed head model of traumatic brain injury. PLos One. 2016
Michael Sangobowale, Ph.D., M.S. Postdoctoral Fellow Department of Neurology University of Pennsylvania Mutch 417 51 N. 39th Street Philadelphia, PA 19104
Email: Michael.sangobowale@uphs.upenn.edu