Headache Hunter
It might start with an aura — a scintillating scotoma of zigzag lines, opaque circles, rings of colors. You might turn or blink, but it just gets worse. Then the pounding starts inside your head.
You’re having a migraine, and you reach for whatever remedy you’ve found most effective over the years.
Mandee Schaub ’22 knows the feeling all too well. “I’ve had 24/7 headaches since I was 12 years old,” she said. “Every day, all the time.”
Schaub graduated with a master’s in biomedical science and a concentration in neuroscience, and she plans to help people who suffer from debilitating headaches. She’s now a doctoral student at the University of Texas at Dallas, working in the lab of Greg Dussor — one of the nation’s few migraine research labs.
“I tell everyone I’m very calling-driven,” Schaub said. “Mine is to do migraine research. It’s a premier lab for migraine research in the United States, so it’s an amazing opportunity.”
Schaub is also the first migraine patient to work with Dussor.
“She’s probably one of the most motivated students we’ve had come work here, at least in our lab,” Dussor said.
Schaub, 24, grew up in Brunswick County and graduated from Pfeiffer University in Misenheimer, studying pre-medicine. She then enrolled in graduate school at ECU, deciding research was more for her than becoming a doctor.
“I realized I could have a lot larger scale of helping people with headaches if I was helping develop therapeutics or helping find out what was causing the headaches rather than just treating patients,” she said.
At ECU, her mentor was Stefan Clemens, a professor of physiology at the Brody School of Medicine. She also worked closely with Kori Brewer, a professor of emergency medicine and collaborator with Clemens on pain-management research.
“She’s driven, and she’s really driven by her desire to understand what’s at the bottom of things,” Brewer said. Schaub also worked in the ECU Office of Licensing and Commercialization and with Clemens and Brewer on two patents related to pain relief, including one where she is listed as a co-inventor on the provisional patent application: “Methods and compositions for preventing and treating fibrosis and improving functional recovery after injury or with aging.”
As she seeks to understand what causes migraines and how she can translate that into therapeutics, Schaub has gotten some relief from a monoclonal antibody therapy the FDA approved in 2018.
“I was living at an eight (pain level) every day at that point,” she said. “I was mostly debilitated with headaches, and I was doing a lot of grinning and bearing it. But now I’m living with like a four or five on my pain scale. It’s been an interesting journey, but I think it’s prepared me for what I’m about to do.”
Once she completes her doctorate, she plans to come back east to work, study or teach.
“Rural North Carolina, that’s where my heart is, so my ultimate goal is to open a nonprofit migraine treatment center somewhere in rural North Carolina,” Schaub said. “But I can definitely see myself coming back to ECU.”