
Director - INIM/Chair/Assistant Dean - Research/Professor
Institute for Neuro-Immune Medicine
Dr. Kiran C. Patel College of Osteopathic Medicine
Dr. Nancy Klimas has 40 years of professional experience and has achieved international recognition for her research and clinical efforts in multi-symptom disorders, myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS), Gulf War illness (GWI), fibromyalgia, and most recently Long COVID.
She is the Director of the Institute for Neuro-Immune Medicine, Assistant Dean of Research and Professor of Clinical Immunology at the Dr. Kiran C. Patel College of Osteopathic Medicine. She chairs the Department of Clinical Immunology at Nova Southeastern University. Dr. Klimas is Professor Emerita, at the University of Miami’s Miller School of Medicine where she practiced for 30 years, a diplomat of the American Board of Internal Medicine, a diplomat in Diagnostic Laboratory Immunology, and Director of Environmental Medicine Research at the Miami Veterans Affairs Medical Center Geriatric Research Education and Clinical Center (GRECC).
She has achieved national and international recognition for her research and clinical efforts in multi-symptom disorders, including ME/CFS and GWI. She is a past president of the International Association for ME/CFS and a past member of the Health and Human Services CFS Advisory Committee., the VA GWI Research Advisory Committee, the National Academy of Medicine’s ME/CFS clinical case definition working group, and has served on several NIH advisory panels.
She founded the NSU Institute for Neuro Immune Medicine, where she directs a group of eighteen remarkable interdisciplinary scientists and clinicians who are working together from bedside to bench and back to bedside, working to discover and implement innovative strategies that effectively treat or prevent these disabling chronic illnesses, while training the next generation of clinicians and scientists.
NIH R15: Genomic approach to find novel biomarkers and mechanisms of CFS/ME
The employment of advanced genomic technologies and a well-rounded research approach
will allow us to identify regulators of transcription that result in characteristic
symptomatology associated with CFS/ME in female patients.
DoD GWIRP/ IIREA:Testing the Model: A Phase I/II Randomized Double Blind Placebo Control
Trial of Therapeutics: Liposomal Glutathione and Curcumin
The goal is to implement a phase I/II placebo control double blinded 3 arm study
of liposomal glutathione, curcumin and placebo in GWI in 75 veterans with GWI (25
per arm) and assess the safety, feasibility and clinical response to the interventions;.
Integrate repeat assessment and modeling of dynamic response to exercise challenge
in order to map homeostatic pathways before and after 12 weeks of intervention. Finally,
assess antioxidant and methylation-related metabolic status prior to, during, and
after acute exercise in GWI subjects before and after these antioxidant interventions.