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The Michael Stern Parkinson’s
Research Foundation provides major support for three
laboratories:
The
Greengard Laboratory, The Rockefeller University.
The Michael Stern Parkinson’s
Research Foundation was established in 2001 to support and
expand the pioneering research of Paul Greengard, Ph.D, at
The Rockefeller University. Dr. Greengard discovered the
fundamental rules by which neurons process the signals they
receive – work that earned him medicine’s highest honor, the
Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.
Dr. Greengard’s research continues to focus on neural
communication and the breakdown in communication that causes
Parkinson’s disease.
The
Michael Stern Foundation Parkinson’s Disease Research Center
at Harvard University and McLean Hospital
Under the direction of Ole
Isacson, MD, The Stern Research Center at Harvard
University’s McLean Hospital, focuses on new therapeutic
approaches for the treatment of P Parkinson’s disease,
including the development of stem cell transplantation to
replace dying dopamine neurons.
The
Institute for Neurodegenerative Disorders
The Institute for
Neurodegenerative Disorders, in New Haven, CT, under the
leadership of Kenneth Marek, MD, and John Seibyl, MD, uses
neuroimaging to improve early diagnosis of Parkinson’s
disease, track response to treatment, and understand how
Parkinson’s disease affects all regions of the brain.
Of every
dollar raised by The
Michael Stern Parkinson’s Research
Foundation 94 cents goes directly to research programs. |