E. coli bacteria’s defense secret revealed

By tagging a cell’s proteins with fluorescent beacons, Cornell researchers have found out how E. coli bacteria defend themselves against antibiotics and other poisons. Probably not good news for the bacteria. When undesirable molecules show up, the bacterial cell opens a tunnel though its outer membrane and “effluxes,” or pumps…

Continue reading

Symposium examines threat of antimicrobial resistance

“There are times when transmissible diseases can actually be so serious that they can threaten the very security of the nation or the world. [Antimicrobial resistance] has been classified as a problem that reaches that level,” said Dr. Arjun Srinivasan, associate director of Healthcare Associated Infection Prevention Programs at the…

Continue reading

Program to offer diagnostic services for animal shelters

Program to offer diagnostic services for animal shelters

 

Maddie’s Shelter Medicine Program at Cornell’s College of Veterinary Medicine has launched a pilot program to provide diagnostic services for animal shelters.

Animal shelters often struggle to pay for diagnostic testing for outbreaks, and even for individual animals, making it difficult to determine the right course of treatment. Many illnesses may go undiagnosed or untreated, or treatment may be delayed while funds are raised. Maddie’s Shelter Lab, a pilot program, aims to ease the financial burden many of these shelters continually face.

Maddie’s Shelter Lab offers a 50 percent discount on diagnostic services and supplies, as well as free shipping, to nonprofit humane organizations in New York state. Maddie’s Shelter Lab is subsidized by a gift from Maddie’s Fund, a national foundation established by David ’62 and Cheryl Duffield to revolutionize the status and well-being of companion animals. The services are offered in collaboration with the New York State Animal Health Diagnostic Center at the College of Veterinary Medicine.

“This service will allow for assistance in diagnosing outbreaks in animal shelters – from respiratory outbreaks such as canine influenza, to gastrointestinal conditions such as parasites, parvovirus and panleukopenia,” said Dr. Elizabeth Berliner, the Janet L. Swanson Director of Shelter Medicine at Cornell. “In some cases, immune testing of exposed but asymptomatic animals will enable shelters to better manage outbreaks and reduce quarantine periods.

“Diagnostic testing can also serve life-saving efforts for individual homeless pets, particularly seniors or those with chronic conditions,” Berliner said.

Although the pilot program is limited to humane organizations in New York, it may be expanded to other states in the future. For more information visit the Maddie’s Shelter Medicine Program at Cornell website.

This article was written by Claudia Wheatley and published in the Cornell Chronicle on March 15, 2017.

Save the Date: May 4, 2017 Antimicrobial Resistance Symposium

Current projects and discoveries from Cornell Ithaca, Weill Cornell Medicine and colleagues Thursday May 4th 2017, 10:30AM – 5:30PM Nevin Welcome Center, Cornell Botanic Gardens, Ithaca, NY Keynote Address: Arjun Srinivasan, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (bio) Confirmed Speakers Include: Ilana Brito, Biomedical Engineering David Calfee, Infectious Disease, Weill Cornell…

Continue reading

Milestones made toward developing malaria vaccine

A new malaria vaccine that is currently under development has recently passed major clinical trial milestones.  Malaria is a serious and potentially fatal disease transmitted by mosquitoes primarily in subtropical and tropical regions.  According to the CDC, in 2015 approximately 214 million cases of malaria occurred around the world and…

Continue reading

Diagnosing, treating ‘superbugs’ is goal of NYC-Ithaca team

Dr. Michael Satlin’s patients aren’t just battling cancer. Many are also fighting drug-resistant bacteria – “superbugs” that threaten their fragile immune systems, and their lives. “They can die within hours or days of infection if they’re not properly treated, because they have no immune system,” said Satlin, assistant professor of…

Continue reading

Digital agriculture report looks to data-driven future

Cornell experts issued a report this week outlining the opportunities and challenges facing New York state’s farmers and food producers as emerging digital technologies shape the agriculture industry. For the report, Harold van Es, professor in the School of Integrative Plant Science (SIPS), and Joshua Woodard of the Charles H. Dyson School of…

Continue reading

World Antibiotic Awareness Week

This came across my newsfeed this morning:  Antibiotics: Handle with Care. This is the World Health Organization’s (WHO) media campaign theme as they launch World Antibiotic Awareness Week. You might ask yourself, why must we be aware? Antibiotics are those pills that I get a prescription for when I’m feeling…

Continue reading

Nobel laureate describes process that led to parasite preventive for animals and humans

William Campbell, PhD, won a Nobel Prize in 2015 for helping to develop the antiparasitic drug ivermectin. Dr. Campbell described the process that resulted in the discovery of the drug for a standing room-only crowd on the Cornell campus Oct. 13. Ivermectin was first shown to be effective against parasitic…

Continue reading

Research project to combat ‘superbugs,’ antibiotic resistance

Researchers from the Meinig School of Biomedical Engineering and Weill Cornell Medicine are teaming up to learn more about antibiotic resistance in neutropenic patients – individuals with low levels of infection-fighting white blood cells, such as those with leukemia. The research project is funded with a $500,000 grant from the…

Continue reading