Dr. Chandan K Sen’s current research on tissue injury and repair is split into three programs: management of stroke by nutritional supplements, post-infarction myocardial remodeling, and cutaneous wound healing. Specifically, his program emphasize on oxygen, redox and miRNA biology. Work in the laboratory ranges from cellular/molecular studies, small (rodents) and large (swine, canine) animal models to clinical trials.
For the last 10 years he has been editor-in-chief of the #1 rated journal in oxygen and redox biology, Antioxidants & Redox Signaling (impact factor 7.581). Dr. Sen is also an associate editor of the prestigious American Physiological Society journal, Physiological Genomics. Dr. Sen serves as the Editor-in-Chief of the Wound Healing Society’s annual volume- Advances in Wound Care. He has published more than 250 publications and is cited more than 800 times annually in the indexed literature. He chairs the Surgery, Anesthesia and Trauma study section of the National Institutes of Health. Chandan Sen is a tenured Professor of Surgery and Associate Dean for Translational and Applied Research in The Ohio State University College of Medicine. He is also Executive Director of The Ohio State University Comprehensive Wound Center that cares for 1500 patient visits a month and has provided over 100,000 CME/CEU on wound care during the last 5 years.
Dr. Sen directs The Ohio State University Medical Center’s Technology Commercialization and Industry Partnership program. He also serves on the National Institutes of Health (NIH) panel on public-private partnerships. Dr. Sen has been appointed Champion of Change (CoC) for Ohio State on the NIH national CoC program. He directs two programs in the Center for Clinical and Translational Science (CCTS: Ohio State’s NIH Clinical and Translational Science Award): the Novel Technologies/Methodologies program and the Pilot Studies program.
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