|
University Graduate School 2002-2004 Academic Bulletin |
|
||||||
Pathology and Laboratory Medicine
School of Medicine Indianapolis
Chairperson
Departmental E-mail
Departmental URL
Graduate Faculty
Culbertson Professor of Pathology
Distinguished Professor
Nordschow Professor of Laboratory Medicine
Professors
Associate Professors
Assistant Professors
Graduate Advisor
Master of Science in Pathology and Doctor of Philosophy
Areas of Specialization
Special Departmental Requirements
(See also general University Graduate School requirements.)
Admission Requirements
Master of Science in Pathology Degree
Course Requirements
M.S. Degree in Pathology with Emphasis in an Area of Experimental Pathology
M.S. Degree in Pathology with Special Concentration in Pathology Laboratory Sciences
Thesis
Final Examination
Doctor of Philosophy Degree in Experimental Pathology
Only those students who are medical students, have a doctoral degree in medicine, dentistry, or veterinary medicine, or have already earned the M.S. or M.A. degree (research thesis) in experimental pathology or related basic science are eligible to apply for the Ph.D.; all others will be enrolled in a program leading to the M.S. degree.
Course Requirements
Grades
Minor
Foreign Language
Qualifying Examination
Research Proposal
Dissertation
C603 General Pathology (6 cr.) Basic concepts and principles of disease processes.
C700 Clinical Chemistry I (3 cr.) P: B500 or B800 or equivalent. Methodology, instrumentation, and interpretation with clinical correlation of procedures in the clinical chemistry laboratory.
C701 Clinical Chemistry II (2-3 cr.) P: B500 or B800 or equivalent. Special clinical chemistry therapeutic drug monitoring and radioassay, radioimmunoassay, and enzyme immunoassay.
C800 Advanced Pathology (cr. arr.) Subject material and credit hours arranged to conform to needs of student.
C802 Advanced Morphologic Hematology (2 cr.) P: consent of instructor. A graduate-level course with emphasis on diagnostic morphologic hematology. This course covers several aspects of morphologic hematology, including erythrokinetics, myeloid and erythroid morphology, leukemia classification, myelodysplastic syndromes, myeloproliferative disorders, and newer concepts in diagnostic hematology.
C803 Diagnostic Immunopathology (2 cr.) P: basic undergraduate immunology and permission of instructor. Emphasis on immunobiology and diagnostic immunopathology. This course covers several aspects of immunopathology including autoimmune disease, transplantation biology, immunodeficiency disorders, and use of molecular diagnostics.
C808 Graduate Seminar in Pathology (1 cr.) P: consent of instructor. One-hour, graduate-level seminar series with emphasis on experimental pathology. First-year graduate students present critical literature reviews of contemporary research topics. More advanced students present proposals and reports of their research.
C820 Advances in Diagnostic Microbiology (3 cr.) Discussions of infectious diseases and agents of infectious diseases including source, clinical manifestations, pathogenesis, epidemiology, treatment, and prevention and control, and the correlation of these subjects with laboratory diagnostic methods. Contemporary subjects will be emphasized.
C850 Cellular Structure of the Nervous System (3 cr.) Cellular structure and ultrastructure of the C.N.S. in normal and experimental situations, including cell biology of neurons, astrocytes, oligodendroglia, brain macrophages, mast cells, brain vessels, and barriers. Organization of neural systems into global and point-to-point circuits; generative and regressive phenomena; and cerebral transplantation in neurodegenerative conditions.
C858 Experimental Pathology (5 cr.) Review and performance of selected experiments in pathology illustrating the types of pathologic processes.
C859 Research in Pathology (cr. arr.)* Supervised initiation of a research project in pathology, and counseling in the completion of a thesis.
C862 Basic Pathologic Techniques (5 cr.) Methods of the histologic and chemical laboratories of pathology; principles of examination used in the usual procedures of surgical and autopsy pathology.
C875 Biochemical Pathology (3 cr.) P: C603 or B800. A survey of biochemical pathology as demonstrated by recent advances in research in pathology. Selected topics for lecture and discussion will include aspects of tissue, cellular, subcellular, and molecular pathology.
G556 Methods of Humane Animal Experimentation (1 cr.) The purpose of this course is to provide graduate students entering careers in life science disciplines with the opportunity to obtain training in the proper care and humane use of laboratory animals. Federal regulations and considerations in the selection of animal models will also be discussed.
G655 Research Communications Seminar (2 cr.) Study of the methodological and systematic treatments of scientific data required for effective communication through written primary and secondary research publications, oral presentations, abstracts, post-presentations, and grant proposals.
G890 Methods in Molecular Biology and Pathology (3 cr.) P: G865 or J838, and consent of instructor. Basic principles and techniques in molecular biology and pathology. Particular emphasis will be on molecular techniques that can be used to study problems related to biochemistry and pathology.
| ||||||||
Office of Creative Services
Poplars 721
400 East Seventh Street
Bloomington, IN 47405-3085
(812) 855-1162
Submit Questions or Comments
Copyright ,,
The Trustees of Indiana University