ATS 2020 Advance Program

10:45 Improving the Value of ICU Care through the De-Implementation of Unnecessary Practices L. Spece, MD, MS, Seattle, WA 11:00 Building the Next Generation of Implementation Scientists to Advance Health Equity C. Boyce, PhD, Bethesda, MD BASIC • CLINICAL • TRANSLATIONAL SCIENTIFIC SYMPOSIUM C9 POST-INFECTION LUNG REGENERATION AND REPAIR Assemblies on Pulmonary Infections and Tuberculosis; Allergy, Immunology and Inflammation; Critical Care; Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology; Respiratory Structure and Function 9:15 a.m. - 11:15 a.m. Target Audience Basic, translational and clinical faculty as well as fellows and students will benefit from this session. Objectives At the conclusion of this session, the participant will be able to: • garner new knowledge on the latest developments in the field and learn how to harness new information with technology that is state of the art in the field; • understand newly described mechanisms that promote wound repair processes after lung injury; This session will provide the learner with a comprehensive overview of mechanisms that involve regeneration and repair processes in the respiratory system during and after infection/injury. The focus of this symposium will be to link the fields of structural cell biology and the immune system, to enhance our critical understanding of lung repair. The combined functions of each of these systems is crucial to lung repair and homeostasis after infection especially in patients with underlying chronic lung disease or transplant recipients. Speakers will review the concept of lung regeneration/repair and how cells of the structural/immune systems pertain to this process. It is anticipated that the symposium will be of great and broad interest to the ATS scientific community. Chairing: A.E. Samarasinghe, PhD, Memphis, TN J.P. Metcalf, MD, Oklahoma City, OK K.M. Gowdy, BS, MS, PhD, Greenville, NC 9:15 Epithelial Stem and Progenitor Cells in Repair and Regeneration S.H. Randell, PhD, Chapel Hill, NC 9:35 Lung Repair Mechanisms following Influenza Virus Infection S. Schultz-Cherry, PhD, Memphis, TN 9:55 Epigenetics in Lung Repair Post-Influenza J.F. Alcorn, PhD, Pittsburgh, PA 10:15 Lung Tissue Repair Mechanisms after Parasite Infections D. Herbert, PhD, Philadelphia, PA 10:35 Innate Lymphoid Cells as Regulators of Lung Repair after Injury H. Kita, MD, Scottsdale, AZ 10:55 Myeloid Cells Regulate Repair after Acute Lung Injury A.M. Manicone, MD, Seattle, WA CLINICAL PUBLIC ADVISORY ROUNDTABLE SYMPOSIUM C10 BUILDING GLOBAL ADVOCACY TO ADVANCE GLOBAL LUNG HEALTH Public Advisory Roundtable 9:15 a.m. - 11:15 a.m. Target Audience Physicians, basic and translational scientists, clinician investigators, registered nurses, advanced practice nurses, nurse practitioners, patients, caregivers and parents. Objectives At the conclusion of this session, the participant will be able to: • apply new knowledge to improve structure and integrity of coordinated international patient registries; ATS 2020 • Philadelphia, PA 106 TUESDAY • MAY 19

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