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- About APS
Thiago Moreira, PhD, DDS
University of Sao Paolo
APS members are doing amazing things. We asked Thiago Moreira, PhD, DDS—one of our esteemed member-researchers—to tell us about his work and its implications on our understanding of life and health. He also shares why he may have pursued a career in archeology if he hadn’t studied physiology.
What do you do?
TM: I am an assistant professor of physiology at the University of Sao Paulo in Brazil, where I have been working for the last 13 years. My career has been devoted to cardiorespiratory research, teaching (undergraduate and graduate courses), and the support of physiology.
Give it context.
TM: All meaningful actions of the brain result from the orchestrated activity of many neurons. My research is a branch of integrative neuroscience, a discipline that seeks to understand how the brain processes specific types of information. The laboratory studies how the mammalian brain regulates respiration and blood pressure, two physiological processes that are dysfunctional in very common diseases (such as hypertension, obesity, apneic syndromes, etc.). The work consists of identifying relevant neuronal networks in rodents using electrophysiologic and neuroanatomic methods. The main focus is on a region of the brainstem that provides the chemical drive to breathe and contains the neurons that maintain blood pressure.
We believe that we’re contributing to the cardiorespiratory field in trying to understand how molecular, synaptic, and cellular properties of individual neurons in densely interconnected networks result in behaviors such as breathing and regulation of blood pressure.
What would you be doing if not science?
TM: Science has always fascinated me right from childhood. Science is a way of thinking, and it is important that people understand its value. There is so much out there that we as human beings fail to understand and by doing science, we get closer to the truth. It quenches our thirst for knowledge and satisfies our childlike curiosity.
If I was not a scientist (very hard to believe), I probably would like to work at an archaeological museum to better understand how different groups of humans interacted and mated with each other over the long stretch of prehistory.