Professional Bio
Dr. Krupa Shah is Assistant Professor and a board-certified geriatrician in the Department of Medicine and the Department of Orthopaedics. She completed her residency training at Baylor College of Medicine and her geriatric medicine fellowship at Washington University in St. Louis. Her clinical responsibilities involve caring not only for the general older adult population, but also for HIV-infected older individuals.
Dr. Shah's current research involves investigating issues relating to HIV and Aging with a focus on prevention and management of frailty. Her research in this area has been in part supported by the University's Developmental Center for AIDS Research (D-CFAR). Dr. Shah also has a research interest with respect to reversing age-related decline in physical function among frail older adults with sarcopenic obesity.
Her research in both areas has been appreciated by the scientific community. Dr. Shah has been invited to speak at local and national conferences. She routinely presents her research at national conferences and symposiums. Her work has been published in leading peer-reviewed journals such as the New England Journal of Medicine, the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society and the Journal of AIDS and Clinical Research.
Dr. Shah has received several awards from national and local organizations. The American Geriatrics Society, for example, has honored her with the Merck/AGS New Investigator Award. She has received multiple awards from the NIH-funded Center for AIDS Research. Most recently, she was accepted into the NIH-sponsored Early Career Reviewer Program and was named as a KL2 Scholar by the University's NIH-funded CTSI.
Research Bio
Dr. Krupa Shah is Assistant Professor and a board-certified geriatrician in the Department of Medicine and the Department of Orthopaedics. She completed her residency training at Baylor College of Medicine and her geriatric medicine fellowship at Washington University in St. Louis. Her clinical responsibilities involve caring not only for the general older adult population, but also for HIV-infected older individuals.
Dr. Shah's current research involves investigating issues relating to HIV and Aging with a focus on prevention and management of frailty. Her research in this area has been in part supported by the University's Developmental Center for AIDS Research (D-CFAR). Dr. Shah also has a research interest with respect to reversing age-related decline in physical function among frail older adults with sarcopenic obesity.
Her research in both areas has been appreciated by the scientific community. Dr. Shah has been invited to speak at local and national conferences. She routinely presents her research at national conferences and symposiums. Her work has been published in leading peer-reviewed journals such as the New England Journal of Medicine, the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society and the Journal of AIDS and Clinical Research.
Dr. Shah has received several awards from national and local organizations. The American Geriatrics Society, for example, has honored her with the Merck/AGS New Investigator Award. She has received multiple awards from the NIH-funded Center for AIDS Research. Most recently, she was accepted into the NIH-sponsored Early Career Reviewer Program and was named as a KL2 Scholar by the University's NIH-funded CTSI.
| KL2 Mentored Career Development Scholar Award | Clinical and Translational Science Institute (CTSI) |
2012 - 2014 |
| Center for AIDS Research Early Career Investigator Award | NIH, 16th Annual National CFAR Scientific Symposium |
2012 |
| Early Career Reviewer Program at the Center for Scientific Review (CSR) | NIH |
2012 - 2014 |
| Center for AIDS Research Young Investigator Award | NIH, 15th Annual National CFAR Scientific Symposium |
2011 |
| New Investigator Award | Merck/American Geriatrics Society |
2011 |
| Scholar | John A. Hartford Foundation |
2010 - 2012 |
| ASBMR Young Investigator, Travel Award | American Society for Bone and Mineral Research (ASBMR) |
2010 |
| Best Clinical/Translational Science Poster UR World AIDS Day Scientific Symposium | Developmental Center for AIDS Research (D-CFAR) |
2010 |
| T32 Training Grant, University of Rochester | NIH, National Institute on Aging |
2009 - 2011 |
| NIA Bedside-to-Bench Conference Travel Award | American Geriatrics Society |
2009 |
| Teaching Excellence Award by Residents | Baylor College of Medicine |
2006 |
| Resident Teaching Award | Society of Teachers of Family Medicine |
2006 |
| Journal Club Leadership Award | Baylor College of Medicine |
2006 |
| Teaching Excellence Award by Residents | Baylor College of Medicine |
2005 |
2013 Jun
Shah K, Majeed Z, Jonason J, O'Keefe RJ. "The role of muscle in bone repair: the cells, signals, and tissue responses to injury." Current osteoporosis reports. 2013 Jun 0; 11(2):130-5. |
2013 Apr
Shah K, Villareal DT. "Weight loss and improved fitness slow down the decline in mobility in obese adults with type 2 diabetes." Evidence-based medicine. 2013 Apr 0; 18(2):e18. Epub 2012 Jul 10. |
2013 Apr
Shah NL, Shah K. "Will congress decide the future of geriatric medicine?" Journal of the American Geriatrics Society. 2013 Apr 0; 61(4):664-5. |
2012 Sep
Villareal DT, Smith GI, Shah K, Mittendorfer B. "Effect of weight loss on the rate of muscle protein synthesis during fasted and fed conditions in obese older adults." Obesity (Silver Spring, Md.). 2012 Sep 0; 20(9):1780-6. Epub 2011 Sep 22. |
2012 Jul
Smith GI, Villareal DT, Sinacore DR, Shah K, Mittendorfer B. "Muscle protein synthesis response to exercise training in obese, older men and women." Medicine and science in sports and exercise. 2012 Jul 0; 44(7):1259-66. |