Department of Pathology (PATH)

Box G-B5, Providence, RI 02912
Phone: (401) 863-3119

As faculty in a university-college and in a medical school, we pursue the dual goals of research and teaching about the pathogenesis of human disease within a broader social and environmental context. We seek to preserve the values of integrity, academic freedom, open communication, and diversity within this community of scholars and students. As pathologists in the practice of anatomic and clinical pathology, we are dedicated to provide high-quality diagnostic expertise, clinical consultation, and state-of-the-art diagnostic testing and patient data management. As academic pathologists, we also accept the responsibility to train medical and graduate students, residents, and fellows who will become the next generation of scientists and physicians. Our goal is to pursue basic, clinical, and translational research on mechanisms, prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of human disease and to develop innovative teaching programs for undergraduates, medical students, and graduate students at Brown University.


Courses – 2007-08

BIOL 1290 Cancer Biology
BIOL 1290 Colonialism, Imperialism & Public Health in Africa: Past & Present
BIOL 2850 Introduction to Research Pathobiology
BIOL 0300 Endocrinology
BIOL 1820 Environmental Health and Disease
BIOL 1870 Techniques in Pathobiology
BIOL 2840B Environmental Toxicology
BIOL 2860 Molecular Mechanisms of Disease


Faculty – Who We Are and What We Do

Recent Student Projects

  • The role glycoprotein E in the sorting mechanism of the Herpes Simplex Virus.
  • Biological basis of music appreciation.
  • Determining a functional role for AKt1 in the regulation of utero-placental development.
  • The role of Ak + 1 in the suppression of apoptosis in the peripubertal testis following exposure to MEHP.
  • DNA damage by hexaulent chromium and glutathione.
  • Effect of cadmium and chromium co-exposure and its effect on chromium cytotoxicity in renal cells.