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Roskamp InstituteThe Roskamp Institute, founded by the Robert Roskamp Foundation in Sarasota, Florida in 2003, is a non-profit biomedical research center with an emphasis on Alzheimer's disease.[1] It also operates a memory clinic and clinical research offices in Tampa, Florida.[2] The institute is focused on finding the causes and treatments for neuropsychiatric and neurodegenerative diseases, particularly the Alzheimer's disease. Additional recommended knowledgeThe Institute's lead researchers, Dr. Michael Mullan and Dr. Fiona Crawford[3] were members of a team of scientists who discovered in the early 1990s that the onset of Alzheimer’s disease was directly related to the accumulation of the β-amyloid protein.[4] The Roskamp Institute tied up with the Institute of Neuroscience of Trinity College, Dublin to launch a clinical trial study in September 2006 to determine if the drug Nilvadipine might be useful in the cure of Alzheimer's disease.[5] The study has been funded by the Roskamp Institute. The aim of the study is to determine if Nilvadipine can alter β-amyloid protein. Nilvadipine is currently used to cure high blood pressure and is available in Ireland on prescription. The institute is currently housed in a 41,000 sq. feet scientific research facility (formerly used by Bausch & Lomb) in Sarasota, Florida. The institute facility contains proteomics, genomics, mass spectrometry, and chemistry labs. Lead by Drs. Michael Mullan and Fiona Crawford, the organization employs more than 50 scientists, technicians, and other research staff. References
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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Roskamp_Institute". A list of authors is available in Wikipedia. |