Suhanee Mitragotri
Suhanee is an undergraduate student at Harvard University, majoring in neuroscience with a minor in global health and health policy. She is involved in neuropsychiatry research at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and in the past, she has conducted research in the fields of animal behavior, drug development and orthopedic trauma.
Latest Content
Article
Your Gut Is Proof That You Lived Through a Pandemic
A microbiome analysis study highlights that pandemic-related lifestyle changes may be responsible for alterations seen in the microbial profile of the small intestine before versus during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Article
Implanting Microdevices Into Brain Tumors To Determine the Best Treatment
Scientists have demonstrated the potential for using intratumoral microdevices (IMDs) to test various cancer drugs on the tumor before implementing systemic treatment. The approach could offer a hope in tackling hard-to-treat gliomas.
Article
Using Exercise to Inform Insulin Delivery in Patients With Type 1 Diabetes
Current automated insulin delivery systems for Type 1 diabetics struggle to regulate blood glucose effectively during exercise, but integrating data from wearable fitness sensors and AI could change that, a recent study suggests.
Article
Drug Combination Could Offer Therapy for Treatment-Resistant Breast Cancer
Researchers explored the impact of double HER2 mutations and identified a specific combination of existing cancer drugs able to target breast cancer cells that were previously resistant to treatment.
Article
Scientists Find a Way To Reverse Infertility
Scientists have found a way to reverse infertility in a sterile mouse model by reducing the concentration of plasma high-density lipoproteins, known to impact fertility, using constitutively expressed bacterial serum opacity factor.
Article
Using Gut Bacteria To Treat Diabetes
Scientists have demonstrated the specific role that certain gut microbe species play in carbohydrate metabolism, suggesting the potential for insulin-sensitive gut bacteria to serve as a treatment for individuals with Type 2 diabetes.
Advertisement