Contributors

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Host

Susan Newman Manfull, PhD

The host of Untangling PANDAS & PANS is Susan Newman Manfull, PhD.  After earning her PhD in social psychology, she worked for the FAA, developing stress management seminars for air traffic controllers and then taught college-level psychology courses for 18+ years.


After a six-month family sojourn in Provence, she left teaching to pursue writing about travel and wine in the South of France, and to spend more time with her only daughter, Alexandra ‘Alex’ Manfull.  Susan was poised to begin work on a book about winemakers in Provence when her life came to a screeching halt with the devastating death of her 26-year-old daughter, due to PANDAS.

Susan and her husband William Manfull co-founded The  Alex Manfull Fund which is dedicated to supporting research, education, and greater awareness of PANDAS/PANS, especially in adolescents and young adults.  The ultimate goal is that no life ever again be cut short by PANDAS/PANS.

https://thealexmanfullfund.org/

Guests

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Guest

Dr. Brent Harris

Dr. Harris is a tenured physician-scientist and neuropathologist specializing in neurological disease research, medical education, and clinical service. His research focuses on neurodegeneration, CNS neoplasia, neuroinflammation, and glial-neuronal communication. As a neuropathologist and neuropharmacologist, he aims to identify novel pharmacological targets. He directs Neuropathology and the Georgetown Brain Bank, collaborating on basic, translational, and clinical neuroscience projects at GUMC and beyond. Dr. Harris also consults for the DOJ and DC Office of the Chief Medical Examiner and chairs the Neuropathology Committee for the College of American Pathologists.

https://neurology.georgetown.edu/patientcare/pond-brain-bank/
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Guest

Dr. Herbert Lachman

Dr. Herbert Lachman is a physician and behavioral geneticist researching the molecular basis of schizophrenia, autism, bipolar disorder, and intellectual and developmental disabilities. His lab uses patient-derived induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) to model neuropsychiatric disorders, generating neurons, cerebral organoids, and microglia for gene expression and epigenetic studies. They explore candidate genes involved in endosome recycling, immunity, and neuronal development using gene knockdown and CRISPR approaches. Current projects include iPSC models of 22q11.2 deletion syndrome, CHD8 haploinsufficiency, Lowe Syndrome, and Jansen de Vries Syndrome, with a growing focus on the immune system’s role in pediatric neuropsychiatric disorders like PANS.

https://einsteinmed.edu/faculty/1688/Herbert-Lachman
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Guest

Sarah O'Dor, PhD

Dr. O’Dor earned her Ph.D. in clinical psychology (child/adolescent focus) from Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine. She trained at Lurie Children’s Hospital, NYU Child Study Center, and University of Chicago Medical Center, and completed her internship and a two-year postdoctoral fellowship at MGH/Harvard Medical School. Dr. O’Dor specializes in assessing children, adolescents, and young adults with developmental, psychological, and medical complexities, including ADHD, anxiety, depression, and learning disabilities. She presents nationally on pediatric OCD, PANS/PANDAS, depression, and neuropsychological assessment, and has co-authored numerous peer-reviewed publications. An active researcher, she has received funding from the International OCD Foundation and American Psychiatric Foundation, earning honors such as the Alies Muskin Career Development Leadership Award, Michael A. Jenike Young Investigator Award, and Anne Klibanski Scholar Award.

https://www.metrowestpsych.com/