Melissa Mazan, D.V.M., DACVIM (LAIM)

Melissa Mazan, D.V.M., DACVIM (LAIM)

Research/Areas of Interest:

The equine respiratory system: Pathophysiology of small airway inflammatory disease - airway smooth muscle; Effects of particulate matter air pollution on equine respiratory disease; Resting energy in horses with recurrent airway obstruction; Non-invasive lung function testing; Stem cell applications in equine internal medicine; Role of the trophic macrophage in lung regeneration; Stem cell applications for respiratory disease and systemic inflammation; Airway disease in horses, COPD, regenerative medicine; Dynamics of bronchioalveolar stem cell response to sublethal hyperoxia and recovery in mice; Role of the macrophage; environmental respiratory disease (animal models); stem cell applications

Education

  • Doctor of Vet Medicine, Tufts-Cummings School of VM, USA, 1993
  • BA, Yale University, New Haven, United States, 1993

Biography

Dr. Melissa Mazan is a Professor at the Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine's Hospital for Large Animals. Lung function, she notes, is essential to the success of equine athletes, and optimizing performance for competing horses is a particular thrill for her. Dr. Mazan is proudest of the collaboration she has undertaken with Dr.Andrew Hoffman in the area of equine inflammatory airway disease, which affects as many as 80 percent of stabled horses and has provided pathways to better understanding similar human diseases, such as emphysema.

Dr. Mazan also teaches courses on medicine, toxicology, parasitology, and exercise physiology at the Cummings School, where she was drawn by the opportunity to combine research, clinical work, and teaching.

Dr. Mazan enjoys hiking, playing the piano, and spending time with family and friends. She is married to Edward Deveney, a physicist who teaches at Bridgewater State College. They have two daughters, Chloe and Rae. They also share their house with two cats and a dog. Dr. Mazan and her family reside in North Grafton, Massachusetts