Author Interviews, Herpes Viruses, Inflammation, Vaccine Studies / 21.10.2025

[caption id="attachment_71064" align="alignleft" width="200"]Ali Dehghani, DODepartment of Medicine
University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center / Case Western Reserve University
Presenting Author, IDWeek 2025 Dr. Dehghani[/caption] MedicalResearch.com Interview with: Ali Dehghani, DO Department of Medicine University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center / Case Western Reserve University Presenting Author, IDWeek 2025 MedicalResearch.com: What is the background for this study? Response: Shingles (herpes zoster) is caused by reactivation of the varicella-zoster virus, which can inflame blood vessels and the nervous system. Evidence over the past decade has linked shingles to higher risks of heart attack, stroke, and dementia—but it was unclear whether the shingles vaccine might lessen those long-term effects.   [caption id="attachment_71061" align="aligncenter" width="500"]herpes-zoster-cdc-image CDC PHIL Image[/caption] MedicalResearch.com: What are the main findings? Response:  Using data from over 100 U.S. health systems, we followed adults age 50 and older for up to five years. We found that people who developed shingles had a 20–30% higher risk of cardiovascular events, vascular dementia, and death compared with similar adults without shingles. Those who had received the recombinant zoster vaccine (Shingrix) before their infection had substantially lower long-term risks—about 25% fewer major cardiac events, 40% lower early mortality, and nearly 50% less vascular dementia over time.
Author Interviews, COVID -19 Coronavirus, Vaccine Studies / 02.09.2021

MedicalResearch.com Interview with: [caption id="attachment_58030" align="alignleft" width="160"]David H. Canaday Dr. Canaday[/caption] David H. Canaday, MD Associate Director of Research Geriatric Research, Education and Clinical Center (GRECC),  Cleveland VA Professor, Division of Infectious Disease, Case Western Reserve University Cleveland, Ohio MedicalResearch.com: What is the background for this study? Response: We were interested in following up on a prior study where we determined that nursing home residents, and in particular those that were given the Pfizer shot who never had COVID-19 in the past, had 4 fold less antibodies against the key Spike protein of the coronavirus than did the group of health care workers who were the other group studied. We wanted to see how those antibodies levels in these groups held up over 6 months. 
Author Interviews / 23.01.2019

MedicalResearch.com Interview with: [caption id="attachment_47123" align="alignleft" width="184"]Dr-Byron Caughey Dr-Caughey[/caption] Byron Caughey, Ph.D.  Senior Investigator Chief, TSE/prion Biochemistry Section Laboratory of Persistent Viral Diseases NIH/NIAID Rocky Mountain Laboratories . Hamilton, MT 59840 USA MedicalResearch.com: What is the background for this study? Would you briefly explain the significance of prion-induced diseases and why they have been difficult to diagnosis?  Response: Although prion diseases such as Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) are rarer than many other neurodegenerative diseases in humans, they are rapidly fatal, untreatable and transmissible. Therefore it is important to be able to diagnose prion diseases as early as possible, not only to accurately inform patients, families and caregivers, but also to reduce risks of transmission and  improve prospects for developing therapeutics. Toward these goals, we have shown that our RT-QuIC prion seed amplification assays are highly accurate for diagnosing sporadic CJD using patients’ spinal fluid and/or nasal brushings in the clinical phase of disease. However, these particular specimens may not always be available, and it remains unclear how early they become RT-QuIC-positive in infected individuals in the months or years prior to the onset of overt clinical signs. We also showed recently that skin samples obtained post-mortem from sCJD patients are RT-QuIC positive. In the current study, we determined how early prion seeds appear in the rodents infected with prions in order to gain clues as to whether analyses of skin biopsies might provide a means of early preclinical detection of prion infections in humans.
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