Shanshan Li | Skin Wound Healing | Excellence in Research Award

Dr. Shanshan Li | Skin Wound Healing | Excellence in Research Award

Xuzhou Medical University, Department of Forensic Medicine | China

Dr. Shanshan Li is an associate professor and deputy chief forensic physician at Xuzhou Medical University, recognized for her strong academic foundation in forensic medicine and her contributions to wound healing and neurotrauma research. She completed her clinical and forensic medical training across leading Chinese institutions and enhanced her expertise through postdoctoral clinical research and international academic exposure as a visiting scholar. Her professional experience spans teaching, pathology practice, forensic consultation, and mentorship of diverse student groups, supported by an active role on youth editorial boards in reputable medical journals. Her research interests focus on skin wound repair, the wound microenvironment, and brain contusion, and she has developed skills in transcriptomic analysis, molecular pathology, nanoparticle therapeutics, fibrosis regulation, and experimental design. Her scholarly output includes numerous high-impact publications as a first or corresponding author, patents as a primary inventor, and a co-authored academic book, reflecting her innovative contributions to forensic and biomedical science. She is an active member of regional forensic associations and has earned recognition through competitive research projects and editorial appointments. Overall, Dr. Li’s work advances understanding of tissue regeneration and neuroinflammation, demonstrating her commitment to scientific excellence and strengthening her candidacy for recognition in research distinction.

Profile: ORCID

Featured Publications

Zhou, Z., Huang, X., Chen, C., Zou, T., Hai, Y., Dong, G., & Li, S. (2026). LncRNA RMST knockout inhibits fibrosis by down-regulating Smad3 during mouse skin wound healing. Biochemistry and Biophysics Reports, 45, 102386.

Zhao, T., Zhou, Y., Zhang, D., Han, D., Ma, J., Li, S., Li, T., Hu, S., & Li, Z. (2024). Inhibition of TREM-1 alleviates neuroinflammation by modulating microglial polarization via SYK/p38MAPK signaling pathway after traumatic brain injury. Brain Research, 1834, 148907.

Zhang, X., Huang, X., Hang, D., Jin, J., Li, S., Zhu, Y., & Liu, H. (2024). Targeting pyroptosis with nanoparticles to alleviate neuroinflammatory for preventing secondary damage following traumatic brain injury. Science Advances, 10(2), eadj4260.