Louis
Ignarro
Ph.D.,
Nutrition and Scientific Advisory Boards
Louis Ignarro, Ph.D., is a member
of Herbalife’s Nutrition and Scientific Advisory
Boards (NAB, SAB). The NAB is made up of leading
experts around the world in the fields of nutrition
and health who educate and train Herbalife independent
distributors on the principles of nutrition, physical
activity and healthy lifestyle.The SAB advises
the company on advancements in the field of nutrition
science.
Ignarro has made exceptional contributions to
science. His efforts were recognized with the Nobel
Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1998 for his
discovery of nitric oxide and its range of benefits
to the human body. His work has since led to additional
research by scientists around the globe on nitric
oxide. After working with Herbalife to develop
Niteworks™, a dietary supplement designed
to boost the body’s own production of nitric
oxide, Ignarro became a member of the Company’s
Scientific Advisory Board.
Ignarro is currently a distinguished professor
of pharmacology at the UCLA School of Medicine’s
Department of Molecular and Medical Pharmacology
in Los Angeles, which he joined in 1985. Before
relocating to California, he was a professor of
pharmacology at Tulane University School of Medicine,
New Orleans, for 12 years. Previously, Ignarro
was a staff scientist, research department, for
the pharmaceutical division of CIBA-GEIGY Corporation
in New York.
Ignarro has published numerous articles on his
research. In addition to the Nobel Prize, he also
received the Basic Research Prize of the American
Heart Association in 1998, in recognition of his
outstanding contributions to the advancement of
cardiovascular science. That same year, he was
inducted into the National Academy of Sciences
and the following year, into the American Academy
of Arts and Sciences.
He is the founder of the Nitric Oxide Society,
and founder and editor-in-chief of “Nitric
Oxide Biology and Chemistry.” Ignarro holds
a B.S. in pharmacology, Columbia University, 1962,
and a Ph.D. in pharmacology, University of Minnesota,
1966. He also received a postdoctoral fellowship
in chemical pharmacology from National Institutes
of Health in 1968.
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