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Inflammation and the Host Response to
Injury is a large-scale research program supported by the National Institute
of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS), a division of the National Institutes
of Health. This collaborative program aims to uncover the biological
reasons why patients can have dramatically different outcomes after
suffering a traumatic injury.
It is the first large-scale interdisciplinary program to attempt to
solve the life-threatening problem of inflammation following major
trauma or burn injury. Inflammation and the Host
Response to Injury brings together major medical and research
institutions with researchers in the fields of surgery, genomics,
proteomics, biostatistics, bioinformatics, computational biology,
and genetics to focus on the molecular biology of inflammation.
The program, funded initially in 2001, was successfully renewed through 2011 to continue the work of understanding the genomic and proteomic markers that predict ultimate outcomes both good and bad, and suggest new areas for research, as well as possible targets for drug and other interventions.
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Glue Grant Publications
A full listing of articles published based on Glue Grant research from its inception in 2001 until the present is now available. Click on the link following for
a list of these publications. <Publications list - PDF format>
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The Trauma-Related Database Concept
One of the principal products or deliverables of our planned 10-year award, the Trauma Related Database (TRDB) is a large, relational database warehouse containing clinical, proteomic, cell biology, and gene expression data from our trauma and burns patients and healthy control subject studies. The TRDB provides a browser interface for downloading complete datasets, and more importantly, user-selected data subsets. Data can be downloaded as tables (i.e., relational format) and as binary or text files for use in various data analysis applications. Data collection for TRDB is ongoing with planned enrollment through 2010. Refinements to enhance the query and report-writing capabilities of TRDB are also a component of our funded research program.
The program data warehoused in TRDB undergoes a vigorous process of scientific annotation, validation, and curation to insure that the data are of maximum usefulness to the scientific community. While the development of the TRDB as a work product is a work in progress through 2011, access to the curated data in TRDB is available now to our Consortium Members to meet the NIH requirements of timely and responsible release of data. More...
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