Skip to main content
M. Indriati Hood-Pishchany, MD, PhD | Department of Pediatrics

M. Indriati Hood-Pishchany, MD, PhD

Assistant Professor of Pediatrics

M. Indriati Hood Pishchany, MD., PhD

Contact Information

Administrative Office:

Address

Office:
5008 Mary Ellen Jones Bldg.
CB # 7509
Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7509

Resources

M. Indriati Hood-Pishchany, MD, PhD

Assistant Professor of Pediatrics

About

Dr. Hood-Pishchany is a physician scientist specializing in the field of Pediatric Infectious Diseases.

Dr. Hood Pishchany’s research focuses on microbial ecology in the vaginal microbiome. The scientific and medical communities have gained increasing understanding of the vast populations of microbes living in and on the human body, and the potential roles for these microbes in health and disease. The vaginal microbiome is associated with a number of important health outcomes in women and their offspring, impacting risk for sexually transmitted infections, like HIV, and risk for adverse pregnancy outcomes, like preterm birth.

The overarching goal of Dr. Hood Pishchany’s research program is to understand how microbial communities in the vagina are established, what makes these communities stable or unstable, and how they interact with the host to influence health outcomes. To achieve this goal, she is developing methods for cultivation and genetic manipulation of dozens of unique species of vaginal bacteria, including development of innovative methods to grow complex bacterial communities outside of the body. Her work applies experimental evolution and ecological principles to understand how bacteria adapt to conditions in the vagina, and how they interact with each other. By better understanding the individual microbes of the vaginal microbiota, and how these individual microbes interact, it may be possible to design therapies that target the microbiome to improve the health of women and their infants.

Her research explores microbial ecology of the vaginal microbiome and the microbiome’s role in pregnancy and women’s health. Her work spans from fundamental microbiology to preclinical studies with the aim of improving women’s health through the development of microbiome-targeted therapies.

  • Undergraduate

    Houghton College

  • Medical School

    Vanderbilt University

  • Doctor of Philosophy

    Pathology, Microbiology, and Immunology, Vanderbilt University

  • Residency

    Pediatrics, Boston Children's Hospital

  • Fellowship

    Pediatric Infectious Disease, Boston Children's Hospital