Support for young stroke survivors still lacking, charity says

Every year in the UK, five in every 100,000 children, and 3,200 people aged 35 to 64, have a stroke. Younger people are more likely to have subarachnoid haemorrhage strokes, which are associated with worse clinical outcomes.

Austin Willett, chief executive of charity Different Strokes, which was set up to support younger stroke survivors, says support for younger stroke survivors is lacking. “A lot of these people think no one their age before has experienced this, so they might not know who they can go to get support,” he said in a UK Stroke Assembly 2020 online conference this week on the topic of young stroke survivors.
By |2024-07-04T17:46:54+01:0011 September 2020|News|

Researchers unlock key prognostic tool for brain injured patients

In 1974, leading neuroscientist Graham Teasdale co-created the Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) while at the Institute of Neurological Sciences in Glasgow. This scale has since been used to assess coma and impaired consciousness in patients who have had a brain injury.

The scale is used to describe variations in a patient's eye, motor, and verbal responses. Each feature is assigned numerical scores depending on the quality of the response, and total scores range from three, which is a deep coma, to 15, which is full consciousness.
By |2025-06-16T12:32:15+01:0010 September 2020|Insight, News|

The Headway manager translating government Covid-19 advice

As memories of the UK’s national lockdown start to fade, not only are there many lingering impacts on people, businesses and the economy, but government guidance is becoming increasingly difficult to follow.

There are local lockdowns springing up across the UK, and new rules seemingly coming out of the government every week for the general public to contend with. But if the laws around what we can and can’t do post-Covid-19 are confusing for the general population - Glenys Marriott, chair of Headway South Cumbria, is asking us to imagine how confusing they can be for people with a brain injury. Marriott is posting weekly graphics on a Facebook group for Headway service users, breaking down the latest government advice regarding the virus.
By |2024-07-04T17:46:54+01:0010 September 2020|News|

The couples therapist who rehabilitates love after brain injury

Trained couple’s therapist and neuropsychologist Giles Yeates helps support couples and families and their connection and intimacy after a brain injury. He talks to NR Times about how couples can resume their sex lives after brain injury.

“It's about reconnecting that sense of closeness and connection, I'm trying to rehabilitate love,” he says. “After a brain injury, the focus is on the injury and regaining independence, rather than interdependence, but many families ask for this. “When people talk about personality changes, saying the person is different and the connection feels damaged or wrong, couples therapy is way to help them find their way back to each other.”
By |2024-07-04T17:59:17+01:0010 September 2020|Interviews, Insight, News|

Case managers and lawyers – the power of collaboration amid Covid-19

The Covid-19 epidemic has had a disproportionate impact on societies most vulnerable, due to social, financial and medical needs, write legal executive Jack Sales and clinical case manager Alexandra Hitchcock...

With many clients falling into this category case managers and solicitors have needed to continue to work in a collaborative and responsive fashion in order to best respond to the clients’ changing needs. This is compounded when the client is not the only person in the household and  their care team’s needs also need to be considered. Elderly family members and those with other medical conditions along with roommates working from home, children requiring home schooling and regular paid carers needing to self-isolate have made supporting clients’ needs more challenging.
By |2024-07-04T17:46:54+01:0010 September 2020|News, Legal, Case management|

Brain injuries in children – what we do and don’t know

Clinical psychologist Célia Demarchi has been involved in helping shed light on brain injuries in children. Here, she talks about her recent research into how brain injuries affect this growing demographic, and why it’s important that research continues.

Outcomes following traumatic brain injury (TBI) are difficult to predict and NICE guidelines have emphasised the need for UK-based research into predictors of long-term conditions after brain injury. Advances in medicine mean that more and more young people are surviving catastrophic injuries each year, but this does also mean that we now have a growing number of people with needs that aren’t always being met.
By |2024-07-04T17:54:59+01:009 September 2020|Opinion, Insight, News|

Raised blood pressure and diabetes alter brain structure, study shows

In a new study, neuroscientists have found that raised blood pressure and diabetes in mid-life alter brain structure to slow thinking speed and memory.

Looking at results from 22,000 volunteers in the UK Biobank who underwent brain scanning, the scientists found that raised blood pressure and diabetes significantly impaired the brain’s cognitive functions, specifically the performance of thinking speed and short-term memory. Masud Husain, professor of Neurology and Cognitive Neuroscience at the Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences and lead investigator of the study, said:
By |2024-07-04T17:46:54+01:009 September 2020|News|

Memory training could help Parkinson’s patients

A study has found that working memory training increases neural efficiency in Parkinson’s disease.

The neural efficiency hypothesis describes the phenomenon that brighter individuals show lower brain activation than less bright individuals when working on the same cognitive tasks. Impairment of working memory and executive functions is frequently observed in early stages of Parkinson’s disease. Improvements in working memory performance could potentially be achieved via working memory training. However, the specific neural mechanisms underlying different working memory processes, have largely gone under-investigated.
By |2024-07-04T17:46:55+01:009 September 2020|News|

Researchers find stroke prevention suitable for elderly patients

Using blood thinners to prevent stroke in very elderly patients with atrial fibrillation is a challenge for doctors, because of an increased risk of bleeding.

Researchers from the Saiseikai Kumamoto Hospital in Japan decided to conduct a randomised, double-blind trial to compare a daily dose of blood thinner edoxaban with a placebo treatment involving almost 700 elderly Japanese patients who were 80 years old and above. They all had atrial fibrillation, and weren’t considered to be appropriate candidates for oral blood-thinning therapy at doses approved for stroke prevention.
By |2024-07-04T17:46:55+01:009 September 2020|News|

Technology aims to help stroke survivors with spatial neglect

After a stroke, up to one in three survivors will experience a condition called spatial neglect – but researchers say there isn’t enough research being done into the condition.

Spatial neglect is a type of vision loss, where a stroke survivor loses awareness of one side. It’s most common after strokes to the right hemisphere, where people will be unaware of objects or people on the right side, says Helen Morse, PhD student University of East Anglia, funded by the Stroke Association. People with spatial neglect don’t have anything physically wrong with their eyes that causes these problems. Morse calls it a ‘complex and bizarre condition’ that can also affect other ways people receive information, such as visually, as well as their hearing and sense of touch. This, she says, makes it a difficult condition to measure, detect and treat.
By |2024-07-04T17:46:55+01:008 September 2020|News|
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