Nina Rzechorzek
Co-Founder | Branding | Web platform | Policy | Media
I am a clinician-scientist and physiologist working at the interface of translational neuroscience, circadian biology, neurodegeneration and experimental medicine. My research investigates how brain temperature, biological timing, and sleep-wake physiology shape human brain function, resilience, and disease. Using human cellular models including cerebral organoids, multimodal physiology, imaging and translational clinical studies, I study how temporal and thermal regulation influence neural activity and vulnerability to disease. A central aim of my work is to understand how disruption of circadian rhythms, sleep, and thermoregulation contributes to brain injury, neurodegeneration, and other chronic brain disorders. I am particularly interested in whether dynamic physiological signals such as brain temperature variability can reveal disease mechanisms, serve as early biomarkers, and guide more precise therapeutic timing. My goal is to transform the prevention and treatment of brain disease by understanding how brain clocks work, and how the brain works around the clock.
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