5 results match your criteria: "UCL and The National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery[Affiliation]"
J Neurochem
March 2025
Queen Square Institute of Neurology, UCL and The National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery, London, UK.
Neurodegeneration presents a significant challenge in ageing populations, often being detected too late for effective intervention. Biomarkers have shown great potential in addressing this issue, with neurofilament (Nf) proteins emerging as validated biomarkers presently transitioning from research to routine laboratory use. Whilst advances in large-scale quantitative analyses have enabled the targeted study of proteolytic Nf fragments in blood, the complete landscape of the Nf proteolytic breakdown remains unknown.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLancet Neurol
June 2024
Centre for Neuromuscular Diseases, Department of Neuromuscular Diseases, UCL Queen Square Institute of Neurology, University College London, London, UK; MRC International Centre for Genomic Medicine in Neuromuscular Diseases, Department of Neuromuscular Diseases, UCL Queen Square Institute of Neurology, University College London, London, UK.
Anthropogenic climate change is affecting people's health, including those with neurological and psychiatric diseases. Currently, making inferences about the effect of climate change on neurological and psychiatric diseases is challenging because of an overall sparsity of data, differing study methods, paucity of detail regarding disease subtypes, little consideration of the effect of individual and population genetics, and widely differing geographical locations with the potential for regional influences. However, evidence suggests that the incidence, prevalence, and severity of many nervous system conditions (eg, stroke, neurological infections, and some mental health disorders) can be affected by climate change.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn Clin Transl Neurol
September 2020
Department of Neuromuscular Disease, Queen Square Institute of Neurology, UCL, London, UK.
Arq Neuropsiquiatr
March 2017
UCL and the National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery, Reta Lila Weston Institute for Neurological Studies, Institute of Neurology, Queen Square, London, UK.
Two hundred years after the publication, of "An Essay on the Shaking Palsy", this indisputable landmark in our understanding of the nature of Parkinson's disease still remains. What is frequently overlooked, however, is the originality of James Parkinson's ideas about how clinical observations could be segregated into diagnostic entities. Parkinson was a surgeon apothecary with wide ranging interests outside medicine including geology and paleontology.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurology
February 2009
Reta Lila Weston Institute for Neurological Studies, Institute of Neurology, UCL and the National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery, Queen Square, London.
Although our concepts of what causes Parkinson disease (PD) are ever changing and the hunt for a reliable biomarker continues, the clinical picture remains as distinctive as when the malady was first described by James Parkinson and the neurologic Grand Masters of the nineteenth century. Hyposmia and visual hallucinations, however, can now be added as additional features of the clinical syndrome which may be helpful in distinguishing PD from atypical parkinsonism, as well as the growing list of causes of secondary parkinsonism. Selective vulnerability of catecholaminergic long axon projection neurons (part of the isodendritic core) in PD is an important, if recently somewhat neglected, fact and correlation of the severity of nigral loss with bradykinesia and rigidity is the only very reliable anatomo-clinical correlation.
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