Wednesday, October 31, 2012

NYU Cancer, Heart Research Threatened By Sandy Power Outage

Researchers at New York University Hospital are worried the mice they use to study human disease may have perished in the flooding caused by Superstorm Sandy.

Researchers at New York University Hospital are worried the mice they use to study human disease may have perished in the flooding caused by Superstorm Sandy.

iStockphoto.com i

Researchers at New York University Hospital are worried the mice they use to study human disease may have perished in the flooding caused by Superstorm Sandy.

Researchers at New York University Hospital are worried the mice they use to study human disease may have perished in the flooding caused by Superstorm Sandy.

iStockphoto.com

ABC News and the New York Daily News are reporting that cells, tissues, mice and rats used for medical research may have been lost as New York University Hospital approaches its third day without power. The losses could set researchers back years.

One unidentified researcher told the NYDN the laboratories at the hospital's Smilow Research Center on East 32nd Street have been without power since 8:30 p.m. Monday. The center is home to labs investigating heart disease, neurodegeneration and cancer.

Materials like enzymes, cell lines and DNA stored in refrigerators and freezers may be dying as the temperature rises inside the building. The mice and rats, which were kept in the hospital's basement, perished in the flooding caused by the superstorm Sandy, according to NYDN.

"It's so horrible, you don't even want to think about it," Michelle Krogsgaard, a cancer biologist at the research center who has worked there for six years, told ABC. "All the work we did, all the time and money, we're going to have to start all over."

Today, Krogsgaard says she and members of her lab were able to rescue some tissue samples. But they didn't yet have dry ice to keep them cold.

When Shots tried to contact the research center, the website and email server were down, and all calls got to the press office and researchers ended in a busy signal.

The failure of the hospital's backup generators on Monday also meant that more than 200 patients had to be evacuated to other hospitals, including Mount Sinai Medical Center and Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center. Check out Scott Hensley's Storify for more details on how that played out.

 
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