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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 – continued today, June 26th. Symposia included sessions from the African Academy of Neurology; summaries of recent European guidelines for Parkinson’s disease; and the burden of neurological conditions in South America. There were several oral presentations, both in person and online, covering topics including epilepsy, neurotraumatology, sex and gender differences in the brain, multiple sclerosis, and sleep-wake disorders. The day ended with the Presidential Symposium with topics including the neurology of migraine and of MS. Here is a summary of today’s (Day 2) highlights from this hybrid in-person and online conference in Vienna.
An intercontinental view of neurological topics
Today, EAN 2022 included a number of focused and case-based workshops; ‘hands-on’ and teaching courses; career development sessions; and interactive sessions. These covered topics including assessment and treatment of movement disorders; the challenge of neuroinfection; secondary headaches; novel headache treatments; multiple sclerosis (MS) management; and statistics for neurologists.
From individual patient cases to African and South American experiences in neurology
There were several interesting symposia, special sessions and controversy sessions:
Satellite symposia and forum talks covered various topics such as an holistic approach to epilepsy management; migraine disease progression and management; progress in MS management; addressing motor fluctuations in Parkinson’s disease; and clinical trials in Alzheimer’s disease.
A hybrid mix of in-person and ePresentations
Oral presentations involved sessions on the topics of:
Clinical experiences can inform research and vice versa
There were also several ePresentations on similar topics including named conditions such as MS and related disorders; motor neuron disease; epilepsy; and muscle and neuromuscular junction disorder, as well as more general topics such as aging and dementia; sleep-wake disorders; cerebrovascular diseases; cognitive neurology and neuropathies; movement disorders; and neuroimmunology.
Short lectures in the ‘scientific theatre’ arena included:
The plenary symposium including four prize lectures
Understanding the neuropathology of migraine and multiple sclerosis
The Presidential Symposium included four presentations:
The Camillo Golgi Lecture on ‘The contribution of neuropathology to MS research,’ given by Hans Lassmann