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Breakthroughs at OMRF spell the difference between life and death.

Jeanne Morgan works in a hospital, is married to a physician and, as a clinical psychologist, understands how the human mind and body work. But the tired feeling that kept her at home one weekend was much more sinister than a simple cold or flu. Within hours, Morgan's vital organs began to shut down.

Unbeknownst to her, she had severe sepsis, a life-threatening blood infection. Fortunately, she recovered after doctors gave her Xigris, a drug that has its roots in the OMRF labs of Drs. Charles Esmon and Fletcher Taylor.

Xigris is the only FDA-approved treatment for a deadly illness that claims more than half a million lives each year, but it is not the only groundbreaking medication born at OMRF. There's also Ceprotin, the only biologic treatment for children born with a life-threatening protein C deficiency. And Soliris, the first drug to treat a rare and potentially deadly blood disorder known as PNH, likewise took shape in OMRF's labs. Our scientists also played a crucial role in developing drugs that stop the AIDS virus from replicating.

"If we didn't have breakthroughs like those taking place at OMRF, I wouldn't be here today," says Morgan. "You're saving lives."