Research Day 2009: From sun screen dangers to
diabetes care
Awards go to
posters on zinc oxide effects, glucose
monitoring and pancreatic virus

By Nick Piotrowicz
Sept. 21, 2009
It’s a hot, sunny day with no clouds in sight.
But before you race outside, don’t forget to
lather on the sun block—right?
According to
Lisa
Martorano, OMS II,
award-winning presenter at the eighth annual
Ohio University Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine
(OU-HCOM) Research Day held Friday, Sept. 18,
some sunscreens may actually harm human skin
cells.
The study, which won the $200 prize in the
category of basic science research, examined the
effects of zinc oxide-based sunscreens. She
worked with Yang Li, Ph.D., associate
professor of biomedical sciences, on the
project.
“Zinc oxide is routinely used in commercial
sunscreens because it’s transparent on the skin;
however, it can scatter light—but it also
absorbs it,” Martorano says. “If it absorbs
light, it has potential for cellular aging and
cellular damage.”
Martorano also noted that such sunscreens
release free zinc—a compound harmful to skin
cells—into the skin. “When we added UV light,
(free zinc levels) nearly doubled,” Martorano
says. She is quick to add that most sunscreens
are safe to human skin, but she says it doesn’t
hurt to check labels for zinc oxide.
Martorano’s project was one of 19 research
posters completed by Ohio University students at
Research Day. A panel of judges rated the
posters based on professionalism, clarity of
presentation, ability to answer questions, and
readability and visual impact of the posters.
Projects were in one of three groups: two for
basic science research and one for clinical
research. In addition to Martorano’s poster, two
other OU-HCOM student projects won awards.
Tara Edwards, OMS II, won the other basic
science award for her project on the Coxsackie
virus of the pancreas and its relation to
diabetes, and Kim Phan, OMS II, won the
clinical research award for her study on
continuing glucose monitoring of rural ICU
patients.
Phan worked
with Jay Shubrook, D.O., associate
professor of family medicine, and Edwards worked
with Kelly McCall, Ph.D., assistant
professor of specialty medicine, on their
respective research projects.
“I was looking for professional presentations,
and I was also looking for how excited they were
about what they learned,” says
Joe Bianco,
Ph.D., a judge on the panel
and a research scientist in OU-HCOM’s Department
of Geriatric Medicine. “Whether the content has
significant findings or not, it’s the enthusiasm
and doing the research that counts.”
According to
Jessica Wingett, Research Day coordinator
and accounting specialist in OU-HCOM’s Office of
Research and Grants, Research Day participants
often do go on to present and win research
awards at national medical conferences.
Martorano
doesn’t yet know her future plans in biomedical
research, but she agrees that the experience was
invaluable.
“When I first got into [research], I didn’t
quite know what I was going to do,” Martorano
says. “I didn’t have a blueprint out there in
front of me, so I had to really work with other
people in the lab, and they really taught me how
to plan, experiment and guide the direction of
my study.”
In its eight years, Research Day has become a
benchmark of OU-HCOM, Bianco says. “I think the
energy and enthusiasm and the resources put
forth towards [Research Day] show that you can
really integrate clinical and research.”