| Education:
B.A. University of Virginia, 1981
M.D. University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill, 1985
Intern, Department of Surgery: Graduate
Hospital, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania,
1986
Resident, Psychiatry: New York Hospital-Cornell
Medical Center, Payne-Whitney Clinic,
1989
Research Fellow, Psychiatry: University
of North Carolina at Chapel Hill,
1991
Summary
Statement :
Dr. Gilmore is a Professor in the
Department of Psychiatry and is currently
the Acting Associate Chair for Research
and Scientific Affairs. He is Director
of the UNC Schizophrenia Research
Center, an NIMH-sponsored Conte Center
for the Neuroscience of Mental Disorders,
and Director of the Clinical Neuroscience
and Pharmacology Research Fellowship
Program. Dr. Gilmore is also a member
of the UNC Neurodevelopmental Disorders
Research Center and the Curriculum
in Neurobiology. Clinically, Dr.
Gilmore is active in the Schizophrenia
Treatment and Evaluation Program,
both in the Outpatient Clinic and
on the Psychotic Disorders Inpatient
Unit.
Research
Interests:
Dr. Gilmore’s research focuses on
brain development and risk for schizophrenia
and other neurodevelopmental disorders.
One line of research involves the
study of prenatal and early postnatal
brain development in normal children
and in children at risk for neurodevelopmental
disorders and schizophrenia, using
ultrasound and magnetic resonance
imaging. Dr. Gilmore also studies
mechanisms through which maternal
infection during pregnancy alters
cortical neuron development.
Links:
UNC Early Brain Development Studies
(pending)
UNC
Conte Schizophrenia Center (http://www.conte.unc.edu/)
UNC
Neurodevelopmental Disorders Research
Center (http://www.fpg.unc.edu/%7ENDRC/)
UNC
Neurobiology Curriculum (http://www.med.unc.edu/neurobiology/)
Recent
Representative Publications:
Gilmore
JH, van Tol J, Lewis-Streicher H,
Williamson K, Cohen SB, Greenwood
R, Charles CR, Kliewer MA, Whitt JK,
Silva SG, Hertzberg BS, Chescheir
NC. Outcome in children with
fetal isolated mild ventriculomegaly:
A case series. Schizophrenia Research
2001; 48: 219-226.
Gilmore
JH, Gerig G, Specter B, Charles HC,
Wilber JS, Hertzberg BS, Kliewer MA.
Neonatal cerebral ventricle volume:
a comparison of 3D ultrasound and
magnetic resonance imaging. Ultrasound
in Medicine and Biology 2001; 27:1143-1146.
Zhai
G, Lin W, Wilber K, Gerig G, Gilmore
JH. Comparisons of regional white
matter diffusion in healthy neonates
and adults using a 3T head-only scanner.
Radiology 2003; 229: 673-681.
Gilmore
JH, Jarskog LF, Vadlamudi S, Lauder
JM. Prenatal infection and risk for
schizophrenia: IL-1ß, IL-6, and TNFa
inhibit cortical neuron dendrite development.
Neuropsychopharmacology 2004; 29:
1221-1229.
Gilmore
JH, Zhai G, Wilber K, Smith JK, Lin
W, Gerig G. 3T magnetic resonance
imaging of the brain in newborns.
Psychiatry Research Neuroimaging
2004; 132:81-85.
Gilmore
JH, Jarskog LF, Vadlamudi S. Maternal
poly I:C exposure during pregnancy
regulates TNFa, BDNF, and NGF expression
in neonatal brain and the maternal-fetal
unit of the rat. J Neuroimmunology
2005; 159: 106-112. |