
Two 91亚色 research teams have received close to $1.5 million combined to support new investigations into heart health and women鈥檚 health research.
Funding, provided by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research鈥檚 (CIHR) Spring 2025 Project Grant competition, is part of a national investment to support health research across Canada.
鈥91亚色鈥檚 success in this highly competitive program highlights the University鈥檚 growing leadership in interdisciplinary health research that addresses complex medical and social challenges,鈥 says Amir Asif, vice-president research and innovation.

In the Faculty of Science, Gary Sweeney was awarded $998,326 for a five-year study examining how iron and lipid imbalances contribute to heart failure. His project, titled 鈥,鈥 will explore how excess iron and unhealthy fats trigger cellular changes that impair heart function, particularly in individuals with obesity or diabetes.
The research focuses on ferroptosis 鈥 a form of regulated cell death 鈥 and its role in cardiac remodelling, a process that can lead to heart failure following a heart attack. This innovative study aims to improve understanding and treatment of heart failure and related conditions, and uncover new therapeutic targets to prevent or reverse heart damage.
鈥淗eart failure is a common and devastating event,鈥 Sweeney says. 鈥淥ur research contributes to understanding why this occurs and how it can be prevented or treated.鈥
The goal is to uncover the detailed processes behind heart failure so novel treatments and preventions can be developed, leading to better outcomes for people at high risk of heart disease.

In the Faculty of Health, Karen Campbell, along with co-investigators and 91亚色 faculty members Mia Biondi and Roya Haghiri-Vijeh, will lead the four-year study "Exploring the Relationship Between Intimate Partner Violence (IPV) and Health in Women with Multiple Sclerosis (MS).鈥 聽
鈥淐anada has the highest rate of MS in the world and approximately one in four Canadian women have experienced partner violence,鈥 says Campbell. 鈥淭his is a public health issue that needs to be addressed urgently.鈥
Living with a disability can substantially increase a woman鈥檚 risk of experiencing violence, notes Cambell. Women living with MS 鈥 a chronic, often disabling neurological condition 鈥 may face unique vulnerabilities that heighten their risk and consequences of intimate partner violence.
The study will explore how intimate partner violence affects the health and well-being of women with MS, how they manage their safety and care, and how prepared MS health practitioners are to help. The research team will use surveys and interviews with women across Canada and with health-care providers who treat MS.
鈥淭he goal is to better understand women鈥檚 experiences and to improve care by supporting clinicians,鈥 says Campbell. 鈥淭he findings will help create more supportive, trauma- and violence-informed care for women with MS who have experienced intimate partner violence.鈥
The funding was July 18.
