loader from loading.io

Hot-boxing Rats and Brain Neuroscience, with Dr. Robert Laprairie

Researchers Under the Scope

Release Date: 06/19/2022

Dr. Sabira Valiani: Creating Connections in Critical Care show art Dr. Sabira Valiani: Creating Connections in Critical Care

Researchers Under the Scope

  Dr. Sabira Valiani was one of the frontline physicians working inside Saskatoon’s critical care units four years ago, during the initial lockdowns of the Covid-19 pandemic.   “It was really weird,” said Valiani.   Valiani said ‘a lot of light bulbs went off in my head’ amid the automated stillness of the unit, as she watched ventilators breathing for heavily sedated patients.   Covered in head-to-toe personal protective equipment, staff in the intensive care unit struggled to simultaneously treat patients, communicate with family members, and enforce hospital...

info_outline
Dr. Daphne Yau on Blood Sugar & Brain Health show art Dr. Daphne Yau on Blood Sugar & Brain Health

Researchers Under the Scope

Daphne Yau can trace her interest in endocrinology back to a beta-cell physiology experiment during her master’s degree,  working with laboratory mice with Type 2 Diabetes. “It was the part of the pancreas that makes insulin,” she said. “It was fascinating. It also made me realize that maybe pure laboratory research wasn't quite for me." From there, her interest in hormones and fluctuating blood sugar levels grew. Yau is no stranger to medicine. Her mother was a pharmacist, while her father and aunt both worked as physicians. Following in their footsteps, Lou completed her...

info_outline
Dr. Sam Haddad: At the Heart of Patient Care show art Dr. Sam Haddad: At the Heart of Patient Care

Researchers Under the Scope

Haissam Haddad inadvertently horrified his family when he signed up for engineering courses in his first year of university. The teenager returned the next day to change his major to medicine -- a move he's glad he made. Dr. Haddad practiced family medicine in Syria for three years, then arrived in Canada in 1986 to visit his wife's family, who urged him to stay. Haddad faced an uphill battle when he investigated the possibility of becoming a Canadian doctor. One colleague even told him he’d be better off opening a Syrian grocery store. “This gave me a lot of energy to prove him wrong,”...

info_outline
Remote Rehabilitation: Dr. Stacey Lovo's Quest for Equitable Care show art Remote Rehabilitation: Dr. Stacey Lovo's Quest for Equitable Care

Researchers Under the Scope

In this episode, we meet Dr. Stacey Love, Director of Virtual Physiotherapy and Rehabilitation at Saskatchewan's Virtual Health Hub, and an Assistant Professor at the University of Saskatchewan's School of Rehabilitation. She's also involved with the Saskatchewan Centre for Patient Oriented Research. You can see more of her recent publications , along with links to her labs: Musculoskeletal Health and Access to Care:  Virtual Care and Remote Presence:  Stacey Lovo remembers the bitterly cold day in December 2012, when two Indigenous women from northern Saskatchewan stepped off the...

info_outline
Dr. Angelica Lang: Shaping the Future of Shoulder Health show art Dr. Angelica Lang: Shaping the Future of Shoulder Health

Researchers Under the Scope

knows most of the people she sees have to keep working, even if they have shoulder pain.   As an and director of the Musculoskeletal and Ergonomics Lab at the Canadian Centre for Rural and Agricultural Health, Lang’s goal is to reduce that pain — keeping patients on the job.   “A lot of daily life has to be done with your hands,” she said. “The base of that is your shoulder. It allows you to position your hand in all these different ways.”   Lang knows the importance of movement. She grew up in Melfort, Sask., playing hockey, soccer, volleyball, along with track...

info_outline
Stronger Foundations: Dr. Munier Nour on Bone Development in Diabetic Youth show art Stronger Foundations: Dr. Munier Nour on Bone Development in Diabetic Youth

Researchers Under the Scope

Dr. Munier Nour said osteoporosis is often seen as a disease that affects older adults. But compared to their peers, kids with Type 1 diabetes grow into adults eight times as likely to suffer bone fractures.   “Osteoporosis may actually have its origins during pediatric years,” he said. “Because Type 1 diabetes occurs so early in life ….. it influences that bone development that occurs during your peak growth.”   Now, Nour is a co-lead on a national team trying to figure out why.   The pediatric endocrinologist has always taken a logical approach to problem-solving....

info_outline
Thriving Against The Odds: Dr. Amanda Hall on Short Gut Syndrome show art Thriving Against The Odds: Dr. Amanda Hall on Short Gut Syndrome

Researchers Under the Scope

In the heart of the Health Sciences Building,  studies a tray of organoids under a microscope. “They do need a lot of attention and a lot of feeding,” she said, pointing to dot-like points in a gel solution.  The pediatric surgeon and assistant professor of pediatric general surgery will use those dots to identify factors that help infants overcome short gut syndrome. The rare condition affects roughly 24 in every 100,000 babies born in Canada, presenting a profound challenge for infants born with insufficient intestinal length or compromised absorptive capacity. “It’s a...

info_outline
Inhale, Exhale, Repair: Dr. Valerie Verge show art Inhale, Exhale, Repair: Dr. Valerie Verge

Researchers Under the Scope

Valerie Verge was in her early twenties when she landed her first job, doing neuroscience research and she loved it. But 43 years ago, her research journey began to take a twist. "I developed an allergy to rats and mice,” she said. “I was using a box of Kleenex a day.”   She reluctantly had to admit that this may not be her career path, and spent her evenings earning a ‘back-up plan’ degree in computer programming at McGill. She refused to give up laboratory work, and went on with her colleagues to code and create an in house computerized image analysis system that was not...

info_outline
Fighting Treatment-Resistant Depression with Ketamine: Dr. Evyn Peters show art Fighting Treatment-Resistant Depression with Ketamine: Dr. Evyn Peters

Researchers Under the Scope

Dr. Evyn Peters has created pivotal changes for patients arriving at Royal University Hospital's mental health short stay unit, and its emergency department.   With 33 publications and interests spanning , Peters is often one of the first physicians patients see when they’re experiencing a mental health crisis. Peters was finishing his residency at RUH and the University of Saskatchewan’s College of Medicine in 2017, when he and his colleagues first proposed ketamine for short-stay patients who had tried multiple antidepressants without success.   After studying best practices in...

info_outline
Dr. Wendie Marks: Researching Complex Connections Between Stress, Nutrition & Health show art Dr. Wendie Marks: Researching Complex Connections Between Stress, Nutrition & Health

Researchers Under the Scope

By the end of her Grade Eight year in Saskatoon, Wendie Marks was sure about one thing: she knew she wanted to study health and the way early-life development affected the human body.   “I spent a lot of time in the library reading books,” Marks said. “I was always kind of the nerdy type.”   Marks enrolled at the University of Saskatchewan and thrived, earning her PhD in psychology. Her interests evolved towards behavioural neuroscience, focusing on the mechanisms behind behaviour, stress, and their effects on mental and physical health.   “I wanted to make new...

info_outline
 
More Episodes

Researchers in Robert Laprairie's laboratory are hard to miss, wearing tie-dyed lab coats as they oversee mice and lab rats in iPad-sized chambers filled with cannabis smoke.

An associate professor in the College of Pharmacy and Nutrition, Dr. Laprairie and his team are trying to unravel the mysteries of human neurotransmitters and cannabinoid receptors, and their role in neurodegenerative disease. 

"Cannabis is challenging. There's a lot of bureaucracy, there's a lot of stuff that gets in the way. So there was a knowledge gap," said Laprairie.

Still, Laprairie never thought of himself as a career scientist, and initially enrolled as an Education student.

Midway through his studies, he took on a part-time job tending canola seedlings for Agriculture Canada — a job that made him re-think his plans, as he learned more about treating disease in plants.

After switching majors and completing his honours degree in biochemistry, Laprairie arrived at Dalhousie to complete his graduate studies, studying how to  'turn up the volume' on damaged cannabinoid receptors in patients with Huntington's disease, and certain forms of epilepsy. 

"I wanted to focus more on the pharmacology. How does the CB1 [cannabinoid receptor type 1] as a receptor work?" said Laprairie.

Patients with Huntington's disease often lose up to half of their functioning cannabinoid receptors without ever knowing it. 

It's not easy to see that slow degradation happening, Laprairie said.

"In animal studies we've seen the animals tend to be more anxious when the [CB1] receptors stopped. They tend to be somewhat spastic and their movements,” said Laprairie. “Their movements can be a little bit less coordinated and they seem to exhibit some of the symptoms of depression."

Today, Laprairie holds a Canadian Institutes of Health Research chair in Drug Discovery and Development. He and his team are trying to create positive alasteric modulators (PAMs) — drugs that boost, or turn up the volume on a patient's remaining CB1 receptors — without the intoxicating effects associated with marjuana.

In this episode, we also hear why communication -- and finding the right mentor -- is crucial for biomedical researchers and scientists with young families. 

Laprairie jokes that he fathered one child as he completed each degree -- and with three young children, his early career became hectic.

"There's just a lot of strain that puts on a family. Communication and scheduling became essential for survival," he said.

Crediting Dr. Eileen Denovan-Wright, an 'amazing’ supervisor with helping him through his master's and doctoral work, Laprairie describes biomedical research as 'a team sport'

"Her support of me and her acknowledgement and understanding made all the difference in the world. I would not have been successful without that support," Laprairie said.

In 2016, Laprairie was the top pick in the CIHR's fellowship program, and he accepted a post-doctoral fellowship at The Scripps Research Institute in Florida.

Upon his return to Saskatoon, Laprairie went on to work with Dr. Richard Huntsman using cannabidiol, which appeared to reduce the frequency of childhood epileptic seizures when administered orally. 

"Patients that were tested here at the University of Saskatchewan saw about a 50% drop in seizure activity," said Laprairie. 

"For someone who is experiencing a lot of seizures that are otherwise untreatable, that's huge.”

Laprairie says the pharmacology of hallucinogenic drugs including psilocybin mushrooms and LSD are an area he plans to explore in the future.

He believes some hallucinogens could serve as potential anti-depressants, among other therapeutic uses. 

“There are a lot of unanswered questions there,” Laprairie said.