Long Island Scientist Secures Impressive Award

LongIsland.com

Maria Alicia Carrillo Sepulveda of Mineola has received the John F. Perkins Jr. Research Career Enhancement Award from the American Physiological Society.

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Maria Alicia Carrillo Sepulveda, Ph.D., B.S.N.

Maria Alicia Carrillo Sepulveda, Ph.D., B.S.N., associate professor of biomedical sciences at New York Institute of Technology in Old Westbury, N.Y., has received the John F. Perkins Jr. Research Career Enhancement Award from the American Physiological Society. The award allows early-career researchers to obtain special training or an established researcher to develop new skills or retrain in areas of developing interest.
 
This year, Sepulveda, whose research focuses on vascular (blood vessel) biology and health, is one of only four researchers in the nation to receive this prestigious honor.
 
Sepulveda joined New York Institute of Technology's medical school in 2014, where her laboratory research ultimately aims to convert basic science discoveries into treatments that may one day prevent or halt the progression of vascular complications in diabetes. Her studies have examined the link between obesity and hypertension, how short-term exposure to the average American diet increases the risk of developing diabetes and cardiovascular disease, and other related topics.
 
In addition to her esteemed research accolades, Sepulveda is a valued mentor for the university's medical students, three of whom have secured competitive research awards from the American Heart Association while working in her laboratory.
 
Sepulveda received her B.S. in Nursing from the University State of Campinas (UNICAMP, Brazil), and her Specialization in Cardiology from the Heart Institute at the University of Sao Paulo (Brazil). After four years in clinical practice, she transitioned to a scientific career and received her Ph.D. from the University of Sao Paulo, where she investigated how thyroid hormones regulate vascular function. Sepulveda then obtained a total of five years of post-doctoral training in hypertension from Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine at the University of Iowa and in vascular physiology from the Medical College of Georgia, where she developed expertise in vascular physiology and pharmacology.
 
She resides in Mineola, N.Y.
 
About New York Institute of Technology
New York Institute of Technology's six schools and colleges offer undergraduate, graduate, doctoral, and other professional degree programs in in-demand disciplines including computer science, data science, and cybersecurity; biology, health professions, and medicine; architecture and design; engineering; IT and digital technologies; management; and energy and sustainability. A nonprofit, independent, private, and nonsectarian institute of higher education founded in 1955, it welcomes nearly 8,000 students worldwide. The university has campuses in New York City and Long Island, New York; Jonesboro, Arkansas; and Vancouver, British Columbia, as well as programs around the world. More than 112,000 alumni are part of an engaged network of physicians, architects, scientists, engineers, business leaders, digital artists, and healthcare professionals. Together, the university's community of doers, makers, healers, and innovators empowers graduates to change the world, solve 21st-century challenges, and reinvent the future. For more information, visit nyit.edu.