JK Rowling And The MS Society Scotland Fund A New Multiple Sclerosis Research Centre In UK
Main Category: Multiple SclerosisArticle Date: 22 Apr 2006 - 1:00 PDT
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The University of Edinburgh is to form a Scottish Multiple Sclerosis research centre - the first of its kind in the UK - to build on previous work at the University into the devastating condition. Scientists in Edinburgh will strengthen links with other international and UK MS experts to push forward understanding of the disease.
A major donation from Harry Potter author JK Rowling will help combat Multiple Sclerosis (MS), a disease which affects one in 500 Scots. Funding for the £2.5m project will largely come from Multiple Sclerosis Society Scotland, which has been gifted a substantial sum from the author for this work.
The new MS Centre will be housed at The Centre for Regenerative Medicine in The Chancellor's Building, the University's Medical School at Little France. Here, scientists and clinicians will collaborate in 'bench to bedside' research which will use the latest techniques to develop therapies for MS. They will also investigate how to repair the damaged parts of the nervous system and prevent further deterioration.
JK Rowling, Patron of the MS Society Scotland said: "It means a great deal to me to be able to provide support for this much needed research centre. It is an extremely exciting step forward in the on-going battle to try to unlock the mysteries of MS and which will hopefully, one day, lead to a cure."
Sue Polson, who has MS, said: "I am delighted that Edinburgh has been chosen as the site for the new Centre. This tremendous news means that research should now move forward with greater momentum and significance for people with MS - just what we've all been waiting for!"
Professor Peter Brophy of the Centre for Neuroscience Research at the University of Edinburgh welcomed the funding announcement, saying: "At the new centre, positioned in the University's Medical School and adjacent to the new research institute and the Royal Infirmary, we will be able to draw together strands of expertise to better understand MS, and to develop new treatments so that we can take advantage of the strong neuroscience base in Edinburgh."
Professor Peter Sandercock, Professor of Medical Neurology said: "This is an exciting development. The team from the brain imaging research centre at the Western General Hospital will be working with the MS group to apply the innovative new methods they have developed which can measure the changes in brain inflammation, temperature and nerve-cell interconnections that can occur in MS."
Mark Hazelwood, Director of Multiple Sclerosis Society Scotland said: "Scotland has the highest rate of MS in the world. This new Centre will help to put Scotland where it should be - at the forefront of the battle against MS. The Centre is the biggest single investment in research ever made by the Society anywhere in the UK."
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Contact: Linda Menzies
Linda.Menzies@ed.ac.uk
University of Edinburgh
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Special Question
posted by Andreas H. Buchwald on 6 Jul 2006 at 11:43 pmDear headquarters of the MS Society
I put my attention on you because our newspapers wrote that Mrs Rowling is your president. I didn't know the things about her mother before. That's why I want to ask you the following questions:
What do you know about ways out of the disease into real health? What does Mrs Rowling know about such ways? It's why I think we-me and my wife-have found some. She got the diagnosis of MS in 1995, and she couldn't walk anymore. Now, in 2006, she walks, runs, dances, and she became a very good swimmer. For about seven or eight year she hasn't taken pharmacy, she only tried alternative methods. I tried to help her as good as I knew. And the whole crisis helped me to find my own way, and now I am an author having written my fifth novel. Can this story be interesting for you and your famous president?
If yes, please, tell Mrs Rowling, and contact us by e-mail, phone
(+49-341-4247660) or following address:
Andreas & Hannelore Buchwald
Steinpilzweg 9
04249 Leipzig
Germany
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