Innovative Research in IVF Outcomes and Immunology – Lunds Universitet
Development Office, Lunds universitet shared a post on LinkedIn:
“When donations become stories of progress!
Since 1772, the Royal Physiographic Society (Fysiografen) has supported research that changes our society. Every gift is more than an amount – it’s the spark behind new ideas, the courage to try the untried and the will to create real benefit.
Thank you to those of you who invest in curiosity and long-term knowledge.
Herwig Schuler starts in the cell’s smallest machinery.
The enzymes he studies control how our cells function – and they already play a crucial role in today’s cancer treatments. By understanding them even better, the door opens to more accurate drugs. Next steps? Allowing the same enzymes to drive nanomotors that in the long term can sharpen diagnostics and reveal how substances are transported inside our cells. Science that moves – literally.
Armin Tavakoli work in the borderland of quantum physics.
Quantum physics describes nature’s smallest building blocks, but it does more than that: it has paved the way for quantum computers and quantum communication. Armin’s research connects fundamental questions about the limits of theory with the development of technologies based on genuine quantum effects. Where thought experiments meet engineering, the tools of tomorrow are created.
Camila Rosat Consiglio encounter a reality that affects many.
Infertility affects 1 in 6 adults globally. IVF is the most common treatment, but with only about 30% success rate. Camila’s goal is to change this. By mapping hormone-driven molecular programs and immunological profiles linked to IVF outcomes, she wants to pave the way for more tailored treatments – with a higher chance of pregnancy and more knowledge about why treatments succeed or fail.
In the background is the Physiographer – and anyone who chooses to invest in curiosity and long-term knowledge. Thank you for making this research possible. Every penny becomes a chapter in a larger story about health, technology and understanding of our world.
Congratulations to Armin Tavakoli and Camila Consiglio for their support as Associate Senior Lecturers (BUL) and to Herwig Schüler who has received the Horizon grant.”
Camila Rosat Consiglio, Assistant Professor at Lund University, shared Development Office, Lunds Universitet’s post, adding:
“Many thanks to Kungliga Fysiografiska Sällskapet i Lund for supporting our work on systems immunology of human reproduction! Our project aims to identify immunological signatures associated with IVF and helps pave the way for more personalized strategies for achieving a pregnancy.”
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