Clinical Sciences
Research
The current research areas in Neurophysiology Department are as follows:
• Developing new or improved Neurophysiological diagnostic methods for various neurological disorders
• Investigation of genetic factors in the development of epileptic conditions and migraine
• Participation in the Epi25 Consortium, the largest exome sequencing study of epilepsy
• Epidemiologic, genetic and risk factor studies on sudden unexpected death in epilepsy
• Quality of Life in Epilepsy and issues of neuropsychological performance
• Multimodal analysis of physiological predictors of epileptic seizures
• Psychiatric disorders in epilepsy
• Drug trials for the treatment of Epilepsy
• Development of epilepsy in multiple sclerosis
• Investigation of genetic factors in the development of sleep disorders
• Exploring the association between Ab amyloid plaques, glial cells and connexins in an Alzheimer mouse model
• Study of burden on carers of patients with dementia
• Demographic and genetic risk factors associated with Alzheimer's disease and dementia
• Neurocognitive and biomarker studies in working memory
• Participation in a study for dopamine-replacement therapeutic efficacy of a compound for Parkinson Disease
• Brain mapping and signal analysis from sensory organs
• European surveillance of Creutzfeldt‐Jakob disease