
I am a lecturer at the Tropical Biological Research Unit, College of Science, University of Baghdad since 2002-unit present. Working as a researcher and teaching Biology topics in different academic institution inside and outside Iraq. My field of interest is in Environmental health, occupational health, and Toxicology which I published several scientific articles and reviews in a worldwide scientific journals such as Nature. I taught Medical Analysis courses in TBRU, College of Science, University of Baghdad from 2002-2008. Anatomy and Microbiology in Technical Medical Institute, Middle Technical University from 2022-2007. Environmental science and Hematology in Department of Biology, College of Science, University of Baghdad from 2005-2008. I work as a researcher in Water Center laboratories and Nebraska Center for Virology, University of Nebraska, in USA from 2008 until 2019.
VM&S, DVM, College of Veterinary Medicine M.Sc. Pharmacology & Toxicoligy, College of Veterinary Medicine, University of Baghdad Ph.D. Environmental Health, Occupational Health, and Toxicology, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, USA
Researcher Methodology developer Protocol planner
Iraqi Scholarship program in USA, Ministry of Higher Education and Scientific Research. Iraq 2008 Scholarship Graduate Student Award, Iraqi Consular office, Washington D.C. 2010 Larrick Travel Awards, School of Natural Resources Study, University of Nebraska – Lincoln, USA 2012 Science Day Award, Ministry (1st. place), Higher Education and Scientific Research, Iraq 2023
Toxicology, Neurotoxins, Environmental health, Ethnomedicine, phytotoxicology
Pharmacology Toxicology Physiology Environmental Science
Medical Analysis courses in TBRU, College of Science, University of Baghdad Anatomy and Microbiology in Technical Medical Institute, Middle Technical University Environmental science and Hematology in Department of Biology, College of Science, University of Baghdad
Several Undergraduate students graduation projects
Viruses have not previously been reported to act as chemotactic/chemoattractive agents. Rather, viruses as extracellular entities are generally viewed as non-metabolically active spore-like agents that await further infection events upon collision with appropriate host cells. That a virus might actively contribute to its fate via chemotaxis and change the behavior of an organism independent of infection is unprecedented.
Chloroviruses are large viruses that replicate in chlorella-like green algae and normally exist as mutualistic endosymbionts (referred to as zoochlorellae) in protists such as Paramecium bursaria. Chlorovirus populations rise and fall in indigenous waters through time; however, the factors involved in these virus fluctuations are still under investigation. Chloroviruses attach to the surface of P. bursaria but cannot infect their zoochlorellae hosts because the viruses cannot reach the zoochlorellae as long as they are in the symbiotic phase. Predators of P. bursaria, such as copepods and didinia, can bring chloroviruses into contact with zoochlorellae by disrupting the paramecia, which results in an increase in virus titers in micr
... Show MoreAlgae are photosynthetic microorganisms that play important role in aquatic ecosystems as they are the primary producers in aquatic food webs. Several groups of algae are capable of producing toxins that impact aquatic ecosystems, especially managed systems. Cyanobacteria are the most important algae in freshwaters, and many species produce cyanotoxins including hepatotoxins and neurotoxins. The potent cyano-neurotoxins β-N-methylamino-L-alanine (BMAA), 2, 4-diaminobutyric acid dihydrochloride (DABA), and anatoxin-a are especially critical with regards to public and animal health problems.
The cyanobacterial neurotoxin
Background: Chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection is a common health problem that has a worldwide distribution. Apart from the direct effect of the virus on the liver, there are many extrahepatic manifestations among which the probable effect on bone turnover associated with low bone mineral density (BMD). Objectives: This study aimed to determine the association between treated and untreated chronic HBV infection with BMD. Methods: This is a cross-sectional study which included a total of 48 patients with chronic HBV (28 patients treated with tenofovir-disoproxil-fumarate [TDF] antiviral drug and 20 patients have not yet started treatment). Other age- and sex-matched 30 apparently healthy individuals were recruited to represent the hea
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