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TETFund grants FUD researchers N36m to investigate rampant kidney disease cases in Hadejia Valley

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Tertiary Education Trust Fund (TETFund) has given a team of researchers at the Federal University Duste, a N36 million grant.

This grant from TETFund’s National Research Fund will be used to investigate rampant cases of kidney diseases at Hadejia Valley, an area which stretches from Zakirai in Kano State to Nguru and Gashua in Yobe.

The Hadejia Valley is said to currently have the highest rate of kidney diseases in Nigeria.

The Federal University, Dutse’s Chief Information Officer, Alhaji Abdullahi Yahaya, stated on Tuesday, December, 28, 2021, in Dutse that the National Research Fund gave the grant through the TETFund.

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Yahaya stated that the team would be led by Dr. Muhammad Auyo, the Head of the Department of Biological Sciences at the university.

“The lead researcher picked interest in this research area after losing six friends and family members to kidney failure in Hadejia.

“According to Dr. Auyo, the title of the research is: “Rampant kidney diseases in Hadejia Valley, Yobe and Kano States: The Study of Environmental Toxins and Gene Polymorphism,’’ Yahaya added.

He stated also that Auyo wants to find out whether there is the prevalence of a gene called metallothionein, which exposes the people of Hadejia Valley to kidney diseases.

The research also wants to discover the toxins present in the Hadejia Valley in the last 30 years, as a result of the use of pesticides and herbicides, which may have changed the ecosystem.

According to the lead researcher, these chemicals may have affected the food chain, especially crops, water, and fish, and may have been responsible for the high prevalence of kidney diseases in the area.

Yahaya quoted Auyo as saying that the research team will take soil, water, vegetables, cereals, fruits, fishes and meat samples in the subject area every month for 20 months to search for the presence of heavy metals.

The 16-member multidisciplinary research team is divided into Medical, Environmental, Genetic, and DNA sequencing teams.

The research is for two years and is expected to come up with recommendations, Yahaya stated.

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