Jan-Jun 2015

Archived news items from January to June 2015

A digital map of the ageing brain could aid the diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease and other neurodegenerative disorders, a study suggests.

We would like to welcome Dr Grant Mair, who has recently joined CCBS as a Senior Clinical Fellow and Honorary Consultant Neuroradiologist.

CCBS researchers hsve found that eye imaging software could aid disease diagnosis.

Dr Anna Molesworth and CCBS colleagues have been awarded two Department of Health grants for enhanced surveillance studies in Creuztfeldt-Jakob disease.

Suffering from anxiety or depression could carry an increased risk of death from liver disease, University research shows.

Many congratulations to Professor Seth Grant, who has been elected as a Fellow of the Academy of Medical Sciences.

Congratulations to the Lothian Stroke Imaging Team, who made the final shortlist for the BMJ Imaging Team of the Year Award 2015.

A drug that breaks up blood clots in stroke patients’ brains could be used more widely without increased risk, a study shows.

CCBS is proud to be part of the Edinburgh Centre for MS Research, for which funding by the MS Society is announced today.

Congratulations to Dr Fergus Doubal, who has been awarded The Stroke Association Garfield Weston Foundation Senior Clinical Lectureship Award.

Dr Peter Connick has been awarded a prestigious Wellcome Trust Fellowship for his work on information processing deficits in multiple sclerosis.

Congratulations to Professor Benjamin Aribisala, Honorary Research Associate in Brain Imaging at CCBS, who has won the Society for Brain Mapping and Therapeutics and National Space Biomedical Research Institute Young Investigator Award.

Researchers in the Division of Psychiatry have published their findings that genes linked with a greater risk of developing autism may also be associated with higher intelligence.

Congratulations to Dr Paul Brennan who was the recipient of the Lancet Young Investigator Award 2014.

An international team, including CCBS researchers, has identified five key genes that impact the size of structures in the brain. The team says the findings increase knowledge of the causes of variability in brain development.

CCBS researcher Dr Tom Russ has published research showing that how far north a person lives could influence their risk of developing dementia.