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Cerebral small vessel disease
Cerebral small vessel disease is a common condition affecting the brain’s small blood vessels, particularly in older adults, though it is not a normal part of ageing and can occur in younger people. It often causes no symptoms and is frequently discovered incidentally on brain scans. Small vessel disease is a major cause of stroke and dementia and can lead to gradual problems with thinking, memory, balance, and walking. Finding it on a scan does not necessarily mean a person has had a stroke. Although it often prompts little follow-up, early recognition offers an opportunity to reduce future risk through managing vascular risk factors and maintaining a healthy lifestyle.
Co-creation of digital health technologies for management of functional neurological disorders (FND): a workshop
This will be a workshop to be held on 11/10/23, hosted by the University of Central Lancashire (UCLan). This will be funded by the University of Lincoln and N-CODE (Developing technologies that enable diagnosis and management of neurological condition in the community). The workshop will be attended by most of the active researchers in FND in UK, including Prof Jon Stone, Prof Alan Carson, Prof Richard Brown and Dr Mahinda Yogarajah, among others.
NIHR BioResource - Rare Diseases
The NIHR BioResource – Rare Diseases has been established to identify genetic causes of rare diseases, improve rates of diagnosis and to enable studies to develop and validate treatments; thus improving care for those with rare diseases and their families.
Lancashire Neuroscience
The map below shows which other institutions we collaborate with.
A study of standard and new antiepileptic drugs II
Epilepsy is a common medical condition. Recently, a number of new anti-epileptic medicines have become available to treat epilepsy. SANAD-2 compared standard and new anti-epileptic medicines for epilepsy to try and find out which are the best.
