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Welcome to Progress in Mind’s live coverage of EAN 2022. This 8th Congress of the European Academy of Neurology – Vienna, 2022 – started today, June 25th with a number of workshops and interactive sessions before launching into a morning of symposia and lectures. The afternoon included several teaching sessions and presentation of new data in the oral sessions with the evening being dedicated to the plenary symposium given by Baroness Susan Greenfield. Here is a summary of today’s (Day 1) highlights from this hybrid in-person and online conference covering topics including epilepsy, headache and migraine, Parkinson’s disease, multiple sclerosis, CNS tumors and sleep disorders.
Neurology-focused studies can impact clinical practice
Today there were six symposia covering topics including:
Satellite symposia covered the topics of migraine, MS, movement disorders and neurology education.
Biomarkers might help in the management of CNS tumors and Parkinson’s disease
Oral presentations included sessions describing new data on a wide range of neurology-related topics including: muscle and neuromuscular junction disorders; cognitive neurology/neuropsychology; cerebrovascular diseases: acute stroke management; neuro-oncology; MS and related disorders; COVID-19; cerebrovascular diseases; ageing and dementia; neuroimaging; and headache. There were also several ePresentations, with similar topics and the addition of sessions on headache; autonomic nervous system diseases; and neurogenetics, neuroepidemiology and neurological manifestations of systemic diseases.
Educational opportunities and special sessions at EAN
EAN provided a large number of education-based activities including focused and case-based workshops; interactive and career development sessions and teaching and ‘hands-on’ courses. These included sessions on epilepsy care in the emergency department; spotting hyperkinetic movement disorders; practical aspects of needle electromyography and jitter analysis; differential diagnosis of transient ischemic attacks; and sleep disorder treatment.
Neurology research is helping to inform clinical practice
EAN participants also had the choice of attending ‘Special Sessions,’ which included:
A series of half hour sessions took place in the ‘Scientific Theatre’ including discussion of a digital research infrastructure called EBRAINS; the differential diagnosis of demyelinating disease mimics in children; how amyloid imaging may be moving forward the understanding and treatment of Alzheimer’s disease; climate change effects on neurology and sleep; a call for global actions on epilepsy and other neurological disorders; focus on a European Brain Council study on rare neurological and neurometabolic disorders; and how dementia can be affected by multimorbidity.
Plenary symposium
Neuroscience can inform neurology from teenagerhood to old age
The plenary symposium included Baroness Susan Greenfield discussing ‘Where Neuroscience meets neurology: blowing, expanding, and losing the mind.’ This included discussion of how we are driven by the prefrontal cortex, what neuroscience can tell us about consciousness, and what happens when CNS connections get dismantled, such as in Alzheimer’s disease.
Our correspondent’s highlights from the symposium are meant as a fair representation of the scientific content presented. The views and opinions expressed on this page do not necessarily reflect those of Lundbeck.