High-Fidelity Design of Multimodal Restorative Interventions in Gulf War Illness

Abstract

Our objective is to further refine models of immune and endocrine regulatory dysfunction developed under W81XWH-10-1-0774 (Broderick PI) by improving fidelity of the timescale and drug action thereby translating previously idealized treatments into optimally beneficial low-risk drug re-purposing strategies that are immediately deployable as short exposure courses in phase-I clinical trials. With collaborating PI Dr. Whitley (CSU), we continue to make substantive progress towards project goals during this reporting period. We have now implemented tools for the i) direct integration of data with the contextual logic, ii) the efficient identification of treatment target sets destabilizing illness and ensuring remission reachability. We have completed broader more detailed models of male and female regulatory physiology and are currently updating treatment predictions as well as incorporating the use of drug-target pairs.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Jan 01, 2020
Accession Number
AD1094058

Entities

People

  • G. Broderick
  • M. A. Fletcher
  • N. G. Klimas
  • Travis J. Craddock

Organizations

  • Nova Southeastern University

Tags

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Biological Sciences
  • Cell Physiological Processes
  • Chemical Synthesis
  • Chemistry
  • Computational Biology
  • Computational Science
  • Data Science
  • Drug Therapy
  • Health Services
  • Lung Diseases
  • Lymphocytes
  • Mathematical Models
  • Medical Personnel
  • Military Medicine
  • Pituitary And Hypothalamic Hormones And Analogues
  • Reliability
  • Traumatic Stress Disorder

Readers

  • Gulf War Illness and Chronic Multisymptom Illness in Veterans.
  • Research Science/Academic Research
  • Systems Analysis and Design