News articles
- Medical Illustrators presented prestigious Wellcome Image Award
- Neurodegenerative disease research projects secure international collaborative funding
- Novel treatments for epilepsy
- Stem cell study offers hope for Parkinson’s patients
- Professor Alan Thompson appointed as Dean of UCL Faculty of Brain Sciences
- Wellcome Trust Centre for Neuroimaging student receives Young Researcher Award
- UCL Alzheimer’s researcher receives lifetime achievement award
- Dr Jonathan Schott receives the US Alzheimer Association 2011 de Leon Prize in Neuroimaging: New Investigator Award
- Study reveals genetic clues underlying progressive supranuclear palsy
- UCL neuroscientists among the most cited in Parkinson’s disease research
- Professor Maguire awarded Kemali prize
- Award for Professor Roger Lemon
- Professor Dimitri Kullmann recognised for his outstanding research
- 'Consciousness connections' revealed in coma brains
- Four UCL neuroscientists elected to the Academy of Medical Sciences
- May 25 Marks World MS Day
- Prion infection begins after one minute of exposure
- Successes of Deep Brain Stimulation for patients with Parkinson's disease
- Professor Hanna invited to give prestigious ANZAN Lecture
- Severe reaction to epilepsy drug linked to genetic variant
- Rhythm and the perception of time
- How prions propagate
- Understanding how the brain determines coincidence
- Lancet papers testament to clinical impact and significance of neuroscience research at UCL
- World’s first blood test for vCJD
- Researchers identify 5 new genetic variations in total of 11 thought to be important in Parkinson’s Disease risk
- IoN scientist receives prize to promote German-Anglo relations
- IoN News Archive (2010)
- IoN News Archive (2009)
- IoN launches new website
- Professor Hardy receives IFRAD 2011 European Grand Prize for Alzheimer's Research
- Epilepsy surgery shows promising results, says study
- Scientists make step towards better understanding of the brain's teaching signals
- UCL scientists get £88k boost to study hearing problems in Alzheimer’s
- Professor Jon Driver
- Wellcome Trust Centre for Neuroimaging researcher scoop Lloyd’s 2011 Science of Risk Prizes
- Launch of the UCL Institute of Neurology YouTube channel
- Researchers move closer to finding successful drugs to treat Huntington’s disease
- Imaging the evolution of multiple sclerosis
- Brain changes seen in cabbies who take 'The Knowledge'
- Professor Brown gives Annual Stroke Association Royal Lecture
- New Institute Director
- Wolfson Foundation awards £20million to UCL for experimental neurology centre
- Thinking of studying at UCL next year?
- Brain Implant Cures Woman's Tourette's Tics
- New Years Honours
- Professor Ray Dolan elected Fellow of the APS
- Major new funding for research into epilepsy is announced
- New funding to preserve unique archives
- Queen Square Clinical Trial Centre launched
- Detecting stroke
- Are we hard wired to be rebellious?
- The Performing Brain – A moving story? Friday 16th March
- Professor Ray Dolan gives the prestigious Alan Turing Lecture
- Institute scientist takes his research to Parliament
- Prime Minister visits UCL Institute of Neurology
- International project to determine vascular contribution to neurodegeneration begins
- Prestigious European Science Foundation networking grant awarded to Institute of Neurology professor
- Clinical Teaching Awards 2011/12
- Cultural Consultation Service website launches

Third International Workshop on Functional Neurosurgery: Movement Disorders, Pain, Psychiatric Illness, Ethics
Published: Apr 12, 2012 12:07:03 PM
Advanced Neurology Short Courses May 2012
Published: Jan 20, 2012 2:42:50 PM
Prestigious stroke program grant awarded
7 January 2010
David Werring (Department of Brain Repair and Rehabilitation, Stroke Research Group) has been awarded a £940,000 joint program grant from the Stroke Association and British Heart Foundation after a rigorous competition. The funding will support a 5-year program of stroke brain imaging and genetic research.

The team will try to find new ways to predict the risk of intracranial bleeding associated with blood thinning drugs (e.g. warfarin). These are commonly prescribed after stroke due to a blood clot from the heart caused by an abnormal rhythm (atrial fibrillation). New types of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans, and testing for genetic factors that affect the fragility of brain blood vessels, will be developed.
David explains: “Although blood thinning (anticoagulant) drugs after ischaemic stroke due to atrial fibrillation are very effective, a small minority of patients are at risk of devastating brain haemorrhage. In some cases it is very hard to know the best thing to do – on the one hand there is a high risk of recurrent blood clots to the brain, on the other - a danger of bleeding. We want to identify those at highest risk of bleeding using special MRI techniques to detect microbleeds (tiny leaks from blood vessels that show up on brain scans as little black dots).
Microbleeds are now quite commonly found in our stroke patients, but we don’t yet know their full significance. In patients with a lot of microbleeds (especially near the brain surface), anticoagulant drugs might cause a life-threatening large haemorrhage. If this theory is correct, screening for microbleeds could help target the right anticoagulant treatment to the right patients, making them much safer to use.”
