85th Anniversary Biomedical Lecture Series
Internationally Recognized Urology Specialist C. Lowell Parsons, M.D. to Lecture at Chestnut Hill College
Wednesday, October 7, 2009
PHILADELPHIA, PA – C. Lowell Parsons, M.D., professor of surgery in the
Urology Division of the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine,
California will present the lecture, “From Basic Laboratory Research to the
Patient: One Physician's Search for Answers to Bladder Disease" at Chestnut Hill
College on Wednesday, October 7, at 4 p.m. in the East Parlor, St. Joseph
Hall. Chestnut Hill College is located at 9601 Germantown Avenue,
Philadelphia.
In his lecture, Dr. Parsons
will discuss his research in the causes and frequency of bladder disease, and
what challenges lay ahead in the field. Dr. Parsons is currently a Professor of
Surgery / Urology in the School of Medicine at the University of California at
San Diego where he has been a member of the faculty since 1977. He is an
internationally recognized specialist in Interstitial Cystitis (IC), which is
also known as Lower Urinary Dysfunctional Epithelium (LUDE). For 30 years, he
has been conducting clinical, basic and translational research on interstitial
cystitis, and his research discoveries have lead to a better understanding of
the causes and frequency of the disease. Dr. Parsons’ research team is currently
studying the urinary factors that injure the bladder epithelium, the root cause
of IC.
Dr. Parsons is board
certified from the American Board of Urology, and has published more than 200
articles in research publications and in peer reviewed journals. In
addition, he is the principle investigator of many research grants, and travels
widely to train physicians and other health professionals in how to recognize
and treat IC/LUDE. Throughout his career, he has received several honors and
awards, including outstanding achievement in the advancement of urological
science at the University of California San Diego, the UCSD Chancellor’s award,
and the Pfizer Scholars in Urology for Research Award.
Dr. Parsons received his doctor of medicine from the
Yale University School of Medicine in 1970. After completing his medical
internship at Yale in 1971, he spent two years as a staff associate in the
Laboratory of Microbiology at the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda,
Maryland and completed his urology residency training at the Hospital of the
University of Pennsylvania.