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Vladimir Hachinski

Vladimir Hachinski CM OOnt FRCPC FRSC is a Canadian clinical neuroscientist and researcher based at the Schulich School of Medicine and Dentistry at Western University.[1] He is also a Senior Scientist at London's Robarts Research Institute.[2] His research pertains in the greatest part to stroke and dementia, the interactions between them and their joint prevention through holistic brain health promotion.[3] He and John W. Norris helped to establish the world's first successful stroke unit at Sunnybrook Hospital in Toronto,[4][5] and, by extension, helped cement stroke units as the standard of care for stroke patients everywhere.[6][7] He discovered that the control of the heart by the brain is asymmetric, the fight/flight (sympathetic) response being controlled by the right hemisphere and the rest and digest (parasympathetic) response being controlled by the left hemisphere and damage to one key component (the insula) can lead to heart irregularities and sudden death. This discovery has added fundamental knowledge to how the brain controls the heart and blood pressure and lays the foundation for helping prevent sudden death.[8]

Dr. Vladimir Hachinski

Hachinski has held many prominent positions in the global neurology community, including editor-in-chief of the journal Stroke the leading publication in the field and president of the World Federation of Neurology and founder of World Brain Alliance. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada (FRSC) and the Canadian Academy of Health Sciences (FCAHS), a Member of the Orders of Ontario and Canada, and the recipient of several national and international awards and recognitions for his research and advocacy.

Early life, education, and early career edit

Hachinski was born in Zhytomyr, Ukraine, the eldest of three children. He moved with his family to Caripito, Venezuela as a child. The family moved to Port Perry, Ontario, Canada thereafter. He graduated from Port Perry High School a year later at the top of his class .[9]

Hachinski received his MD in 1966 from the University of Toronto,[10][11] and completed his residency in internal medicine and neurology in Toronto and Montreal, followed by a neurophysiology fellowship in Toronto. He received his formal accreditation in neurology as a Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada (FRCPC) in 1972.[10] From 1973-74, a research fellowship with the Ontario Department of Health brought him to a cerebrovascular laboratory at the National Hospital for Nervous Diseases in London, England, and then to the Department of Clinical Physiology at Bispebjerg Hospital in Copenhagen, Denmark.[9]

Following this, he returned to Toronto to take a staff position in the Department of Neurosciences at Sunnybrook Medical Centre, where he and Dr. John W. Norris established the MacLachlan Stroke Unit, Canada's first acute stroke unit.[4][11] Hachinski remained at Sunnybrook until 1980, when he moved to London, Ontario to act as a neurology consultant for its major health centres: University Hospital, Victoria Hospital, St. Joseph's Hospital, and the London Psychiatric Hospital. He was hired concurrently as a professor at Western University (then called the University of Western Ontario).[10] During this time (and until 1990), he also acted as Director of the Investigative Stroke Unit at London's University Hospital.

In 1987, he earned a Master of Science degree from McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario, studying in the Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics with a focus on design, measurement, and evaluation. The University of London’s highest earned degree, Doctor of Science (in Hachinski's case, in medicine), was conferred upon him in 1988 for his “contributions to migraine, stroke, and dementia.”[10]

Research edit

Vascular cognitive impairment edit

At the beginning of Hachinski's career, the view prevailed that most dementias were caused by hardened brain arteries (mental deterioration via cerebral atherosclerosis). Hachinski showed in 1975 that, in fact, only a small minority of dementias were so-caused, and that most were “multi-infarct dementias” — dementias caused by multiple, small, often imperceptible strokes.[12] The terms “vascular dementia” and “vascular cognitive impairment” would later be widely adopted to describe all cognitive impairments "with a vascular component" in order to distinguish them from primary degenerative dementia (i.e., Alzheimer disease and senile dementia) and to emphasize that they are preventable and treatable, insofar as their vascular causes (i.e., atherosclerosis, stroke, etc.) are treatable as well.[13] He has offered an explanation for the origin of some of these lesions and associated symptoms through his concept of ambibaric brain.  He postulates that the brain has two complementary blood pressure systems, one high and one low and disturbances in each lead to different types of preventable lesions.[14]

At the time, the prevalent view that dementia ensued from the slow strangulation of the brain's blood supply by hardening of the arteries spawned a whole industry of brain vessel “vasodilators”. He showed that brain blood vessels in dementia were not “hardened” and that “vasodilators” were not only expensive but useless. He also developed an eponymic “ischemic score” that continues to be widely used to identify the vascular (treatable and preventable) component of dementia.[15] Successfully distinguishing between the two is tremendously important for patient prognosis, as treating the vascular causes of dementias can mitigate their effects. The scale is a prolifically cited tool, and has since been validated and optimized for use outside of clinical research settings.[16]

In 1986, the journal, Archives of Neurology published a series of papers by Hachinski, Harold Merskey and colleagues on the rarefaction of white matter in the brains of elderly people. These papers were among the first to recognize the importance of white matter lesions as risks for stroke and dementia. Rarefaction of white matter in the brain had already been shown to be correlated with a wide variety of health problems, but these papers were groundbreaking for two reasons especially: First, they introduced the term, “leukoaraiosis,” a word derived by Hachinski, Paul Potter and Harold Merskey to etymologically and Hippocratically describe the rarefaction; and second, they specifically highlighted a previously underappreciated relationship between vascular risk factors for cognitive impairment (i.e., treatable and preventable risk factors for both stroke and multi-infarct dementia) and leukoaraiosis. By coining “leukoaraiosis,” Hachinski drew medical practitioners’ attention to these white matter hypodensities in the brains of patients affected by small strokes.[17][18][19]

Hachinski continued to develop and promote his novel approach to dementia — viewing it as a product of preventable and treatable vascular problems, thus itself also amenable to prevention, delay, and mitigation — eventually coining it as the “vascular cognitive impairment approach” to dementias in 1994.[20][21] This proactive and preventative, rather than solely retroactive and treatment-based approach included other novel coinages, such as “brain at risk,” describing patients without cognitive impairment but with risk factors for it.[22][23][24]

Even with these developments, available diagnostic criteria for dementias continued to present a challenge, as they were not able to capture the complex, interactive, and adaptive nature of brain pathologies leading to dementia. For this reason, in 2006, Hachinski decided to lead (with Gabrielle LeBlanc) the development of core common standards to describe the clinical, neuropsychological, imaging, genetic, and neuropathological features of cognitive impairment. This standardization has allowed for ongoing improvement of the diagnostic criteria with new knowledge, comparison of results from different studies, and analysis & meta-analysis using “big data” techniques.[25]

Acute stroke edit

The MacLachlan Stroke Unit at Sunnybrook, Canada's first stroke unit (est. 1975), was almost 20 years ahead of its time; stroke units have been considered the most effective treatment for stroke patients of all ages, severities, and types only since the 1990s.[26][27] Hachinski and Norris' early work with that unit and others helped to cement the importance of dedicated wards for stroke patient monitoring and treatment, but his research over the next 17 years also shaped how those treatments and monitoring methods are executed.

In 1986, while he was Director of the Investigative Stroke Unit at University Hospital in London, he developed (with Robert Coté), the Canadian Neurological Scale – a simple but systematic tool, usable by non-physicians for evaluating and monitoring the neurological status of patients with acute stroke.[28] Later, in 1992, he (with collaborators David Cechetto and Stephen Oppenheimer) began work to explore possible mechanisms for observed increases in catecholamines, cardiac enzymes, arrhythmias, and sudden death following acute stroke. This would eventually lead to the discovery that the insula of the brain is the mediator of these various cardiac complications.[3][29][30][31][32] Knowing this alters doctors to monitor the heart closely, to prevent sudden death.

The scientific bases for preventing stroke and dementia together have been summarized by an international panel of experts.[33][34]

Since stroke, heart disease and dementia represent risks for each other and share the same risk and protective factors, he advocates preventing this “Triple Threat” together.[35]

He leads a multidisciplinary team studying for the first time together environmental, socioeconomic and individual risk and protective factors in the joint prevention of stroke, heart disease and dementia.

He is a participant in an initiative to make brain health the top priority.  He has offered a definition of brain health based on the World Health Organization definition of health” “A state of complete physical, mental and social well-being through a full, balanced, continuous development and exercise of the brain[36] or in lay terms "Brain health is when thinking, feeling and connecting are the best that they can be in a sage, healthy environment."

Stroke prevention edit

In addition to his interest in the mechanisms of stroke and best practices for treatment, Hachinski also has a keen research interest in stroke prevention. He acted as the principal neurological investigator on several seminal, multicentre studies, beginning with the Canadian-American Ticlopidine study (1983–88)[37][38] and the Extracranial/Intracranial Arterial Bypass Surgery trial (1983–87). The former showed a preventative advantage to the drug Ticlopidine over commonly-prescribed Aspirin, while the latter showed that the increasingly popular and very expensive EC/IC arterial bypass procedure did not significantly reduce the risk of ischemic stroke.[39]

In 2003, alongside several other researchers, Hachinski began a proof of principle study through the Canadian Stroke Network on secondary stroke prevention. The study aimed to explore the efficacy of stroke risk-factor counselling and monitoring in effecting lifestyle changes and prescription adherence in patients, as well as exploring barriers and testing possible solutions to effective stroke risk-factor management.[40] The preliminary results were extremely promising, showing that the addition of non-medical personnel to usual stroke care results in far better outcomes and reduced risk-factors. That initial study led to the creation of a multi-centre study in 2009 under the direction of Richard Chan.[41]

Population health edit

Hachinski's home province of Ontario, Canada introduced a formal Provincial Stroke System in 2000.[42] Hachinski advocates a strategy of preventing some dementias through the prevention of stroke.[43] With his colleagues, he showed, for the first time, a concomitant decrease in the incidence of stroke and dementia at a whole-population level.[44] He is leading a team from 5 Western University faculties, 5 provinces and 4 countries, to find out how and help apply the lessons widely.

He advocates and will help implement a new approach to the joint prevention of stroke, ischemic heart disease and dementia (the terrible three).

The new approach is based on these premises:

1. The “terrible three” inflict the highest number of death and disability adjusted life years (DALY’s) globally. However, they share the same treatable and preventable risk factors and represent risks for each other. Consequently, conditions that occur together should be prevented together.

2. To be effective prevention has to occur in “actionable units” small enough that their members have or can develop a sense of community.

3. The approach has to be:

  a. Comprehensive – meaning that all relevant factors need to be considered: Environment, socio-economic factors and individual risk and protective factors

  b. Customized – to address the main and manageable problems

  c. Cost-effective – to justify why it should be done ahead of other priorities

This approach is known as the CCCAP or the 3C’s approach.[45]

Additionally, he advocates a change in strategy. Instead of using fear, warning people that if they don’t lead a healthy lifestyle they will suffer a stroke, heart disease or dementia decades later, the aim is to achieve brain/mental health now.[46]

Key administrative positions and advocacy edit

  • 2015 led the development of a Proclamation about the joint prevention of stroke and dementia, endorsed by all the major international organizations dealing with both.[47] Since then leading the effort to implement the Proclamation on behalf of the World Stroke Organization.
  • 2011–2013: Founding chair, World Brain Alliance, a collection of international organizations promoting brain/mental health and reducing brain/mental health disorders,[3][48][49] founded on three premises:[50]
    1. There is no health without brain health
    2. Brain health begins with the mother's and the child's education
    3. Our brains are our future
    4. Knowledge accrues in pieces but is understood in patterns
    5. God may forgive our sins, but our bodies hold grudges
    6. We need fewer watch dogs and more hunting dogs
    7. We need not only rising stars, but North Stars
  • 2010-13 : President, World Federation of Neurology (WFN; international body representing world neurology); first Canadian in its six decades history[3][51]
  • 2006-10: Vice President (North America), WFN[52]
  • 2000-10: Editor-in-Chief, Stroke[3][11] He introduced 9 international editions and a mentorship program for authors from developing countries.
  • 2008-12 : Vice President, World Stroke Organization[3][53]
  • 2004-06: Led working group to develop World Stroke Agenda (2004, Vancouver) and World Stroke Day Proclamation (2006, Cape Town), observed every October 29.[54][55]

Non-scientific publications edit

Popular (medicine) edit

Hachinski's primary popular medicine contributions have been publications in cooperation with his son, Vladimir, and daughter, Larissa. With Vladimir, he published an article in the Journal of the Canadian Medical Association called, "Music and the Brain" in August 1994.[56] With Larissa, he published the book, Stroke: A Comprehensive Guide to Brain Attack in 2003. Coining and employing the term “brain attack,” the book was written to increase public awareness of the importance of adequate stroke care and early intervention.[3][11][57]

Medical historical edit

An interest in the history of medicine has led Hachinski to publish several articles on the subject over the course of his career:

  • Hachinski, V (March 1999). "Stalin's last years: delusions or dementia?". European Journal of Neurology. 6 (2): 129–132. doi:10.1111/j.1468-1331.1999.tb00004.x. PMID 10053223. S2CID 44833937.
  • Hachinski, Vladimir (1997). "Kos (A poem about Hippocrates)". The Lancet. 349 (9064): 1561. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(05)62150-2. S2CID 208790603.
  • Gasecki, Andrew P.; Hachinski, Vladimir (1996). "On the names of Babinski". Canadian Journal of Neurological Sciences. 23 (1): 76–79. doi:10.1017/s0317167100039226. PMID 8673967.
  • Hachinski, Vladimir (1993). "Neurology in Islamic Spain: a call for further research". Journal of the History of the Neurosciences. 2 (1): 45–51. doi:10.1080/09647049309525551. PMID 11618443.
  • "Cajal: crossroads to greatness". Annals of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada. 25: 290–292. 1992.
  • Hachinski, Vladimir (1986). "H.J.M Barnett: a biographical sketch". Surgical Neurology. 26 (6): 529–531. doi:10.1016/0090-3019(86)90334-4. PMID 3535140.
  • "H.J.M Barnett: a biographical sketch." "Modern Neurosurgical Giants" Ed: Bucy PC. Elsevier, New York, pp. 35–38, 1986.
  • "Transient cerebral ischemia: a historical sketch." In: Historical Aspects of the Neurosciences. (Eds) Rose FC, Bynum WF. Raven Press, New York, pp. 185–193, 1982.

Arts and humanities edit

He possesses an honours degree in history from the University of London, UK, is a Corresponding Member of the North American Academy of the Spanish Language (a corresponding academy of the Royal Spanish Academy)[58] and has published a poetry anthology, Resonancias,[59] in Spanish under the pen name Alejandro Aranda.[11] In addition, "Dream Waltz," composed by Hachinski and orchestrated by Jason Stanford (Professor of Theory and Composition at Western University), premiered at the Musikverein in Vienna, Austria by the Brno Philharmoniker on September 24, 2013.[60][61]

Honours and recognition edit

Awards/recognitions edit

Over the course of his career, Hachinski has been the recipient of many awards and recognitions in his field. The most notable and significant are outlined below.

Honorary degrees edit

Hachinski holds four honorary doctorates. The first, Doctor of Medicine honoris causa from the University of Salamanca, Spain (the oldest university of the Spanish speaking world) was awarded in 2000.[79] This was followed by Doctor of the University honoris causa from the University of Buenos Aires, Argentina (2005),[80][81] Doctor of Medicine honoris causa from the University of Cordoba, Argentina (2007),[82] and Doctor honoris causa from the Russian Academy of Medical Sciences (2012).[3][83]

References edit

  1. ^ "Dr. Vladimir Hachinski - Western University Faculty Profile". www.schulich.uwo.ca. Retrieved 2016-05-31.
  2. ^ "Vladimir Hachinski, CM, MD, DSc, FRCPC, Doctor honoris causaX4". www.robarts.ca. Retrieved 2022-08-16.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Department of Clinical Neurological Sciences at Western University - Vladimir Hachinski Faculty Profile". www.cnsuwo.ca. Retrieved 2016-05-31.
  4. ^ a b "Order of Canada Citation". Retrieved 2016-05-31.
  5. ^ "A stroke of genius" (PDF). Dementia Action Alliance. researchmedia.eu. Retrieved 2016-06-13.
  6. ^ Donnan, Geoffrey A; Fisher, Marc; Macleod, Malcolm; Davis, Stephen M (May 2008). "Stroke". The Lancet. 371 (9624): 1612–1623. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(08)60694-7. PMID 18468545. S2CID 208787942.
  7. ^ Langhorne, Peter; Ramachandra, Samantha; Stroke Unit Trialists' Collaboration (23 April 2020). "Organised inpatient (stroke unit) care for stroke: network meta-analysis". The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. 4 (4): CD000197. doi:10.1002/14651858.CD000197.pub4. ISSN 1469-493X. PMC 7197653. PMID 32324916.
  8. ^ Sörös P, Hachinski V (2012). "Cardiovascular and neurological causes of sudden death after ischaemic stroke". Lancet Neurol. 11 (2): 179–88. doi:10.1016/S1474-4422(11)70291-5. PMID 22265213. S2CID 661118.
  9. ^ a b Arculus, Paul. "Former PPHS graduate now heads World Federation of Neurology". Port Perry and Scugog Township Heritage Gallery (scugogheritage.com). Retrieved 2016-05-31.
  10. ^ a b c d e Canadian who's who. Volume XXIV, 1989, Simpson, Kieran (ed.); University of Toronto Press, 1988
  11. ^ a b c d e f "Dr. Vladimir Hachinski, CM, MD, FRCPC, DSc". Canadians for Health Research (chrcrm.org). Retrieved 2016-05-31.
  12. ^ Hachinski, VC; Lassen, NA; Marshall, J (27 July 1974). "Multi-infarct dementia. A cause of mental deterioration in the elderly". Lancet. 2 (7874): 207–10. doi:10.1016/s0140-6736(74)91496-2. PMID 4135618.
  13. ^ Alagiakrishnan, Kannayiram; Memon, Mohammed A. "Vascular Dementia". MedScape. Background. Retrieved 2016-05-31.
  14. ^ Hachinski, Vladimir; Østergaard, Leif (June 2021). "The Ambibaric Brain: Pathophysiological and Clinical Implications". Stroke. 52 (6): e259–e262. doi:10.1161/STROKEAHA.120.033492. PMID 33940956. S2CID 233719602.
  15. ^ Hachinski, V. C.; Iliff, L. D.; Zilhka, E.; Du Boulay, G. H.; McAllister, V. L.; Marshall, J.; Russell, R. W. R.; Symon, L. (1 September 1975). "Cerebral Blood Flow in Dementia". Archives of Neurology. 32 (9): 632–637. doi:10.1001/archneur.1975.00490510088009. PMID 1164215.
  16. ^ Hachinski, Vladimir; Oveisgharan, S; Romney, AK; Shankle, WR (1 February 2012). "Optimizing the Hachinski Ischemic Scale". Archives of Neurology. 69 (2): 169–75. doi:10.1001/archneurol.2011.1698. PMID 21987392.
  17. ^ Steingart, A.; Hachinski, V. C.; Lau, C.; Fox, A. J.; Diaz, F.; Cape, R.; Lee, D.; Inzitari, D.; Merskey, H. (1 January 1987). "Cognitive and Neurologic Findings in Subjects With Diffuse White Matter Lucencies on Computed Tomographic Scan (Leuko-Araiosis)". Archives of Neurology. 44 (1): 32–35. doi:10.1001/archneur.1987.00520130024012. PMID 3800719.
  18. ^ Aminoff, Michael Jeffrey (2008-01-01). Neurology and General Medicine. Elsevier Health Sciences. p. 128. ISBN 978-0443067075.
  19. ^ Hachinski, V. C.; Potter, P.; Merskey, H. (1 January 1987). "Leuko-Araiosis". Archives of Neurology. 44 (1): 21–23. doi:10.1001/archneur.1987.00520130013009. PMID 3800716.
  20. ^ Hachinski, Vladimir (1994). "Vascular Dementia: A Radical Redefinition". Dementia and Geriatric Cognitive Disorders. 5 (3–4): 130–132. doi:10.1159/000106709. PMID 8087166.
  21. ^ Bowler, JV; Hachinski, V (August 1995). "Vascular cognitive impairment: a new approach to vascular dementia". Baillière's Clinical Neurology. 4 (2): 357–76. PMID 7496625.
  22. ^ Cappa, S. F. (2008). Cognitive Neurology: A Clinical Textbook. Oxford University Press. p. 258. ISBN 9780198569275.
  23. ^ Hachinski, V (12 September 1992). "Preventable senility: a call for action against the vascular dementias". Lancet. 340 (8820): 645–8. doi:10.1016/0140-6736(92)92177-h. PMID 1355217. S2CID 30957302.
  24. ^ Hachinski, V. C.; Bowler, J. V.; Loeb, C. (1 October 1993). "Vascular dementia". Neurology. 43 (10): 2159–60, author reply 2160–1. doi:10.1212/wnl.43.10.2159-a. PMID 8414002. S2CID 40803369.
  25. ^ Hachinski, Vladimir; Iadecola, Costantino; Petersen, Ron C.; Breteler, Monique M.; Nyenhuis, David L.; Black, Sandra E.; Powers, William J.; DeCarli, Charles; Merino, Jose G.; Kalaria, Raj N.; Vinters, Harry V.; Holtzman, David M.; Rosenberg, Gary A.; Wallin, Anders; Dichgans, Martin; Marler, John R.; Leblanc, Gabrielle G. (September 2006). "National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke–Canadian Stroke Network Vascular Cognitive Impairment Harmonization Standards". Stroke. 37 (9): 2220–2241. doi:10.1161/01.STR.0000237236.88823.47. PMID 16917086. S2CID 10272849.
  26. ^ Langhorne, P.; Williams, B.O.; Gilchrist, W.; Howie, K. (August 1993). "Do stroke units save lives?". The Lancet. 342 (8868): 395–398. doi:10.1016/0140-6736(93)92813-9. PMID 8101901. S2CID 1756294.
  27. ^ Sinha, S.; Warburton, E.A. (September 2000). "The evolution of stroke units—towards a more intensive approach?". QJM. 93 (9): 633–638. doi:10.1093/qjmed/93.9.633. PMID 10984558.
  28. ^ Côté, R; Hachinski, V C; Shurvell, B L; Norris, J W; Wolfson, C (July 1986). "The Canadian Neurological Scale: a preliminary study in acute stroke". Stroke. 17 (4): 731–737. doi:10.1161/01.str.17.4.731. PMID 3738958.
  29. ^ Oppenheimer, SM; Hachinski, VC (February 1992). "The cardiac consequences of stroke". Neurologic Clinics. 10 (1): 167–76. doi:10.1016/S0733-8619(18)30239-1. PMID 1557001.
  30. ^ Oppenheimer, Stephen M.; Cechetto, DF; Hachinski, VC (1 May 1990). "Cerebrogenic Cardiac Arrhythmias". Archives of Neurology. 47 (5): 513–9. doi:10.1001/archneur.1990.00530050029008. PMID 2185720.
  31. ^ Oppenheimer, S. M.; Gelb, A.; Girvin, J. P.; Hachinski, V. C. (1 September 1992). "Cardiovascular effects of human insular cortex stimulation". Neurology. 42 (9): 1727–32. doi:10.1212/wnl.42.9.1727. PMID 1513461. S2CID 32371468.
  32. ^ "A stroke of genius" (PDF). Understanding vascular mechanisms > Stroke Related Research > par. 3. Retrieved 2016-05-31.
  33. ^ Hachinski, Vladimir; Einhäupl, Karl; Ganten, Detlev; Alladi, Suvarna; Brayne, Carol; Stephan, Blossom C. M.; Sweeney, Melanie D.; Zlokovic, Berislav; Iturria-Medina, Yasser; Iadecola, Costantino; Nishimura, Nozomi; Schaffer, Chris B.; Whitehead, Shawn N.; Black, Sandra E.; Østergaard, Leif (2019-09-22). "Special topic section: linkages among cerebrovascular, cardiovascular, and cognitive disorders: Preventing dementia by preventing stroke: The Berlin Manifesto". International Journal of Stroke: 174749301987191. doi:10.1177/1747493019871915. ISSN 1747-4930. PMID 31543058. S2CID 202732274.
  34. ^ Hachinski, Vladimir; Ganten, Detlev; Lackland, Daniel; Kreutz, Reinhold; Tsioufis, Konstantinos; Hacke, Werner (2018-10-17). "Implementing the Proclamation of Stroke and Potentially Preventable Dementias". International Journal of Stroke. 13 (8): 780–786. doi:10.1177/1747493018799965. ISSN 1747-4930. PMID 30328803. S2CID 53528721.
  35. ^ Hachinski, Vladimir (2021-08-10). "Brain Health—Curbing Stroke, Heart Disease, and Dementia: The 2020 Wartenberg Lecture". Neurology. 97 (6): 273–279. doi:10.1212/WNL.0000000000012103. ISSN 0028-3878. PMID 33883239. S2CID 233349756.
  36. ^ Hachinski, Vladimir; Avan, Abolfazl; Gilliland, Jason; Oveisgharan, Shahram (May 2021). "A new definition of brain health". The Lancet Neurology. 20 (5): 335–336. doi:10.1016/s1474-4422(21)00102-2. ISSN 1474-4422. PMID 33894188. S2CID 233328835.
  37. ^ Gent, M; Blakely, J A; Easton, J D; Ellis, D J; Hachinski, V C; Harbison, J W; Panak, E; Roberts, R S; Sicurella, J; Turpie, A G (October 1988). "The Canadian American Ticlopidine Study (CATS) in thromboembolic stroke. Design, organization, and baseline results". Stroke. 19 (10): 1203–1210. doi:10.1161/01.str.19.10.1203. PMID 3051529.
  38. ^ Gent, Michael; Donald Easton, J.; Hachinski, VladimirC.; Panak, Edouard; Sicurella, Jane; Blakely, JohnA.; Ellis, DavidJ.; Harbison, JohnW.; Roberts, RobinS.; Turpie, AlexanderG.G. (June 1989). "The Canadian American Ticlopidine Study (Cats) in Thromboembolic Stroke". The Lancet. 333 (8649): 1215–1220. doi:10.1016/s0140-6736(89)92327-1. PMID 2566778. S2CID 22484643.
  39. ^ EC/IC Bypass Study, Group. (7 November 1985). "Failure of Extracranial–Intracranial Arterial Bypass to Reduce the Risk of Ischemic Stroke". New England Journal of Medicine. 313 (19): 1191–1200. doi:10.1056/NEJM198511073131904. PMID 2865674.
  40. ^ "Canadian Stroke Network Annual Report 2002-2003" (PDF). p. 7. Retrieved 2016-05-31.
  41. ^ Chan, Richard. "Promoting Adherence to a Regimen of risk factor modification by Trained Non-medical personnel Evaluated against Regular practice Study". International Standard Randomised Controlled Trial Number (ISRCTN) Registry. doi:10.1186/isrctn07607027.
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  43. ^ "Advocating for global stroke and dementia strategy". London Health Sciences Centre. 2016-02-22. Retrieved 2016-06-01.
  44. ^ Sposato, Luciano A.; Kapral, Moira K.; Fang, Jiming; Gill, Sudeep S.; Hackam, Daniel G.; Cipriano, Lauren E.; Hachinski, Vladimir (1 December 2015). "Declining Incidence of Stroke and Dementia: Coincidence or Prevention Opportunity?". JAMA Neurology. 72 (12): 1529–31. doi:10.1001/jamaneurol.2015.2816. PMID 26658969.
  45. ^ Hachinski, Vladimir; the Dementia Prevention Initiative (2022-02-01). "The comprehensive, customized, cost-effective approach (CCCAP) to prevention of dementia". Alzheimer's & Dementia. 18 (8): 1565–1568. doi:10.1002/alz.12586. ISSN 1552-5260. PMID 35103397. S2CID 246444750.
  46. ^ Avan, Abolfazl; Hachinski, Vladimir; Brain Health Learn and Act Group (2021-09-27). "Brain health: Key to health, productivity, and well-being". Alzheimer's & Dementia. 18 (7): 1396–1407. doi:10.1002/alz.12478. ISSN 1552-5260. PMID 34569702. S2CID 237942165.
  47. ^ Hachinski, Vladimir (2015). "Stroke and potentially preventable dementias proclamation: updated World Stroke Day proclamation". Stroke. 46 (11): 3039–3040. doi:10.1161/strokeaha.115.011237. PMID 26504189. S2CID 36897508.
  48. ^ Neuropenews. "Interview with Vladimir Hachinski". eanpages - News Blog of the European Academy of Neurology. Retrieved 2016-06-06.
  49. ^ "World Brain Alliance". www.wfneurology.org. Retrieved 2016-06-06.
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vladimir, hachinski, major, contributor, this, article, appears, have, close, connection, with, subject, require, cleanup, comply, with, wikipedia, content, policies, particularly, neutral, point, view, please, discuss, further, talk, page, july, 2016, learn, . A major contributor to this article appears to have a close connection with its subject It may require cleanup to comply with Wikipedia s content policies particularly neutral point of view Please discuss further on the talk page July 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Vladimir Hachinski CM OOnt FRCPC FRSC is a Canadian clinical neuroscientist and researcher based at the Schulich School of Medicine and Dentistry at Western University 1 He is also a Senior Scientist at London s Robarts Research Institute 2 His research pertains in the greatest part to stroke and dementia the interactions between them and their joint prevention through holistic brain health promotion 3 He and John W Norris helped to establish the world s first successful stroke unit at Sunnybrook Hospital in Toronto 4 5 and by extension helped cement stroke units as the standard of care for stroke patients everywhere 6 7 He discovered that the control of the heart by the brain is asymmetric the fight flight sympathetic response being controlled by the right hemisphere and the rest and digest parasympathetic response being controlled by the left hemisphere and damage to one key component the insula can lead to heart irregularities and sudden death This discovery has added fundamental knowledge to how the brain controls the heart and blood pressure and lays the foundation for helping prevent sudden death 8 Dr Vladimir HachinskiHachinski has held many prominent positions in the global neurology community including editor in chief of the journal Stroke the leading publication in the field and president of the World Federation of Neurology and founder of World Brain Alliance He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada FRSC and the Canadian Academy of Health Sciences FCAHS a Member of the Orders of Ontario and Canada and the recipient of several national and international awards and recognitions for his research and advocacy Contents 1 Early life education and early career 2 Research 2 1 Vascular cognitive impairment 2 2 Acute stroke 2 3 Stroke prevention 2 4 Population health 3 Key administrative positions and advocacy 4 Non scientific publications 4 1 Popular medicine 4 2 Medical historical 4 3 Arts and humanities 5 Honours and recognition 5 1 Awards recognitions 5 2 Honorary degrees 6 ReferencesEarly life education and early career editHachinski was born in Zhytomyr Ukraine the eldest of three children He moved with his family to Caripito Venezuela as a child The family moved to Port Perry Ontario Canada thereafter He graduated from Port Perry High School a year later at the top of his class 9 Hachinski received his MD in 1966 from the University of Toronto 10 11 and completed his residency in internal medicine and neurology in Toronto and Montreal followed by a neurophysiology fellowship in Toronto He received his formal accreditation in neurology as a Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada FRCPC in 1972 10 From 1973 74 a research fellowship with the Ontario Department of Health brought him to a cerebrovascular laboratory at the National Hospital for Nervous Diseases in London England and then to the Department of Clinical Physiology at Bispebjerg Hospital in Copenhagen Denmark 9 Following this he returned to Toronto to take a staff position in the Department of Neurosciences at Sunnybrook Medical Centre where he and Dr John W Norris established the MacLachlan Stroke Unit Canada s first acute stroke unit 4 11 Hachinski remained at Sunnybrook until 1980 when he moved to London Ontario to act as a neurology consultant for its major health centres University Hospital Victoria Hospital St Joseph s Hospital and the London Psychiatric Hospital He was hired concurrently as a professor at Western University then called the University of Western Ontario 10 During this time and until 1990 he also acted as Director of the Investigative Stroke Unit at London s University Hospital In 1987 he earned a Master of Science degree from McMaster University in Hamilton Ontario studying in the Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics with a focus on design measurement and evaluation The University of London s highest earned degree Doctor of Science in Hachinski s case in medicine was conferred upon him in 1988 for his contributions to migraine stroke and dementia 10 Research editVascular cognitive impairment edit At the beginning of Hachinski s career the view prevailed that most dementias were caused by hardened brain arteries mental deterioration via cerebral atherosclerosis Hachinski showed in 1975 that in fact only a small minority of dementias were so caused and that most were multi infarct dementias dementias caused by multiple small often imperceptible strokes 12 The terms vascular dementia and vascular cognitive impairment would later be widely adopted to describe all cognitive impairments with a vascular component in order to distinguish them from primary degenerative dementia i e Alzheimer disease and senile dementia and to emphasize that they are preventable and treatable insofar as their vascular causes i e atherosclerosis stroke etc are treatable as well 13 He has offered an explanation for the origin of some of these lesions and associated symptoms through his concept of ambibaric brain He postulates that the brain has two complementary blood pressure systems one high and one low and disturbances in each lead to different types of preventable lesions 14 At the time the prevalent view that dementia ensued from the slow strangulation of the brain s blood supply by hardening of the arteries spawned a whole industry of brain vessel vasodilators He showed that brain blood vessels in dementia were not hardened and that vasodilators were not only expensive but useless He also developed an eponymic ischemic score that continues to be widely used to identify the vascular treatable and preventable component of dementia 15 Successfully distinguishing between the two is tremendously important for patient prognosis as treating the vascular causes of dementias can mitigate their effects The scale is a prolifically cited tool and has since been validated and optimized for use outside of clinical research settings 16 In 1986 the journal Archives of Neurology published a series of papers by Hachinski Harold Merskey and colleagues on the rarefaction of white matter in the brains of elderly people These papers were among the first to recognize the importance of white matter lesions as risks for stroke and dementia Rarefaction of white matter in the brain had already been shown to be correlated with a wide variety of health problems but these papers were groundbreaking for two reasons especially First they introduced the term leukoaraiosis a word derived by Hachinski Paul Potter and Harold Merskey to etymologically and Hippocratically describe the rarefaction and second they specifically highlighted a previously underappreciated relationship between vascular risk factors for cognitive impairment i e treatable and preventable risk factors for both stroke and multi infarct dementia and leukoaraiosis By coining leukoaraiosis Hachinski drew medical practitioners attention to these white matter hypodensities in the brains of patients affected by small strokes 17 18 19 Hachinski continued to develop and promote his novel approach to dementia viewing it as a product of preventable and treatable vascular problems thus itself also amenable to prevention delay and mitigation eventually coining it as the vascular cognitive impairment approach to dementias in 1994 20 21 This proactive and preventative rather than solely retroactive and treatment based approach included other novel coinages such as brain at risk describing patients without cognitive impairment but with risk factors for it 22 23 24 Even with these developments available diagnostic criteria for dementias continued to present a challenge as they were not able to capture the complex interactive and adaptive nature of brain pathologies leading to dementia For this reason in 2006 Hachinski decided to lead with Gabrielle LeBlanc the development of core common standards to describe the clinical neuropsychological imaging genetic and neuropathological features of cognitive impairment This standardization has allowed for ongoing improvement of the diagnostic criteria with new knowledge comparison of results from different studies and analysis amp meta analysis using big data techniques 25 Acute stroke edit The MacLachlan Stroke Unit at Sunnybrook Canada s first stroke unit est 1975 was almost 20 years ahead of its time stroke units have been considered the most effective treatment for stroke patients of all ages severities and types only since the 1990s 26 27 Hachinski and Norris early work with that unit and others helped to cement the importance of dedicated wards for stroke patient monitoring and treatment but his research over the next 17 years also shaped how those treatments and monitoring methods are executed In 1986 while he was Director of the Investigative Stroke Unit at University Hospital in London he developed with Robert Cote the Canadian Neurological Scale a simple but systematic tool usable by non physicians for evaluating and monitoring the neurological status of patients with acute stroke 28 Later in 1992 he with collaborators David Cechetto and Stephen Oppenheimer began work to explore possible mechanisms for observed increases in catecholamines cardiac enzymes arrhythmias and sudden death following acute stroke This would eventually lead to the discovery that the insula of the brain is the mediator of these various cardiac complications 3 29 30 31 32 Knowing this alters doctors to monitor the heart closely to prevent sudden death The scientific bases for preventing stroke and dementia together have been summarized by an international panel of experts 33 34 Since stroke heart disease and dementia represent risks for each other and share the same risk and protective factors he advocates preventing this Triple Threat together 35 He leads a multidisciplinary team studying for the first time together environmental socioeconomic and individual risk and protective factors in the joint prevention of stroke heart disease and dementia He is a participant in an initiative to make brain health the top priority He has offered a definition of brain health based on the World Health Organization definition of health A state of complete physical mental and social well being through a full balanced continuous development and exercise of the brain 36 or in lay terms Brain health is when thinking feeling and connecting are the best that they can be in a sage healthy environment Stroke prevention edit In addition to his interest in the mechanisms of stroke and best practices for treatment Hachinski also has a keen research interest in stroke prevention He acted as the principal neurological investigator on several seminal multicentre studies beginning with the Canadian American Ticlopidine study 1983 88 37 38 and the Extracranial Intracranial Arterial Bypass Surgery trial 1983 87 The former showed a preventative advantage to the drug Ticlopidine over commonly prescribed Aspirin while the latter showed that the increasingly popular and very expensive EC IC arterial bypass procedure did not significantly reduce the risk of ischemic stroke 39 In 2003 alongside several other researchers Hachinski began a proof of principle study through the Canadian Stroke Network on secondary stroke prevention The study aimed to explore the efficacy of stroke risk factor counselling and monitoring in effecting lifestyle changes and prescription adherence in patients as well as exploring barriers and testing possible solutions to effective stroke risk factor management 40 The preliminary results were extremely promising showing that the addition of non medical personnel to usual stroke care results in far better outcomes and reduced risk factors That initial study led to the creation of a multi centre study in 2009 under the direction of Richard Chan 41 Population health edit Hachinski s home province of Ontario Canada introduced a formal Provincial Stroke System in 2000 42 Hachinski advocates a strategy of preventing some dementias through the prevention of stroke 43 With his colleagues he showed for the first time a concomitant decrease in the incidence of stroke and dementia at a whole population level 44 He is leading a team from 5 Western University faculties 5 provinces and 4 countries to find out how and help apply the lessons widely He advocates and will help implement a new approach to the joint prevention of stroke ischemic heart disease and dementia the terrible three The new approach is based on these premises 1 The terrible three inflict the highest number of death and disability adjusted life years DALY s globally However they share the same treatable and preventable risk factors and represent risks for each other Consequently conditions that occur together should be prevented together 2 To be effective prevention has to occur in actionable units small enough that their members have or can develop a sense of community 3 The approach has to be a Comprehensive meaning that all relevant factors need to be considered Environment socio economic factors and individual risk and protective factors b Customized to address the main and manageable problems c Cost effective to justify why it should be done ahead of other prioritiesThis approach is known as the CCCAP or the 3C s approach 45 Additionally he advocates a change in strategy Instead of using fear warning people that if they don t lead a healthy lifestyle they will suffer a stroke heart disease or dementia decades later the aim is to achieve brain mental health now 46 Key administrative positions and advocacy edit2015 led the development of a Proclamation about the joint prevention of stroke and dementia endorsed by all the major international organizations dealing with both 47 Since then leading the effort to implement the Proclamation on behalf of the World Stroke Organization 2011 2013 Founding chair World Brain Alliance a collection of international organizations promoting brain mental health and reducing brain mental health disorders 3 48 49 founded on three premises 50 There is no health without brain health Brain health begins with the mother s and the child s education Our brains are our future Knowledge accrues in pieces but is understood in patterns God may forgive our sins but our bodies hold grudges We need fewer watch dogs and more hunting dogs We need not only rising stars but North Stars 2010 13 President World Federation of Neurology WFN international body representing world neurology first Canadian in its six decades history 3 51 2006 10 Vice President North America WFN 52 2000 10 Editor in Chief Stroke 3 11 He introduced 9 international editions and a mentorship program for authors from developing countries 2008 12 Vice President World Stroke Organization 3 53 2004 06 Led working group to develop World Stroke Agenda 2004 Vancouver and World Stroke Day Proclamation 2006 Cape Town observed every October 29 54 55 Non scientific publications editThis section is in list format but may read better as prose You can help by converting this section if appropriate Editing help is available September 2016 Popular medicine edit Hachinski s primary popular medicine contributions have been publications in cooperation with his son Vladimir and daughter Larissa With Vladimir he published an article in the Journal of the Canadian Medical Association called Music and the Brain in August 1994 56 With Larissa he published the book Stroke A Comprehensive Guide to Brain Attack in 2003 Coining and employing the term brain attack the book was written to increase public awareness of the importance of adequate stroke care and early intervention 3 11 57 Medical historical edit An interest in the history of medicine has led Hachinski to publish several articles on the subject over the course of his career Hachinski V March 1999 Stalin s last years delusions or dementia European Journal of Neurology 6 2 129 132 doi 10 1111 j 1468 1331 1999 tb00004 x PMID 10053223 S2CID 44833937 Hachinski Vladimir 1997 Kos A poem about Hippocrates The Lancet 349 9064 1561 doi 10 1016 S0140 6736 05 62150 2 S2CID 208790603 Gasecki Andrew P Hachinski Vladimir 1996 On the names of Babinski Canadian Journal of Neurological Sciences 23 1 76 79 doi 10 1017 s0317167100039226 PMID 8673967 Hachinski Vladimir 1993 Neurology in Islamic Spain a call for further research Journal of the History of the Neurosciences 2 1 45 51 doi 10 1080 09647049309525551 PMID 11618443 Cajal crossroads to greatness Annals of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada 25 290 292 1992 Hachinski Vladimir 1986 H J M Barnett a biographical sketch Surgical Neurology 26 6 529 531 doi 10 1016 0090 3019 86 90334 4 PMID 3535140 H J M Barnett a biographical sketch Modern Neurosurgical Giants Ed Bucy PC Elsevier New York pp 35 38 1986 Transient cerebral ischemia a historical sketch In Historical Aspects of the Neurosciences Eds Rose FC Bynum WF Raven Press New York pp 185 193 1982 Arts and humanities edit He possesses an honours degree in history from the University of London UK is a Corresponding Member of the North American Academy of the Spanish Language a corresponding academy of the Royal Spanish Academy 58 and has published a poetry anthology Resonancias 59 in Spanish under the pen name Alejandro Aranda 11 In addition Dream Waltz composed by Hachinski and orchestrated by Jason Stanford Professor of Theory and Composition at Western University premiered at the Musikverein in Vienna Austria by the Brno Philharmoniker on September 24 2013 60 61 Honours and recognition editAwards recognitions edit Over the course of his career Hachinski has been the recipient of many awards and recognitions in his field The most notable and significant are outlined below 2022 The Potamkin Prize for Research in Pick s Alzheimer s and Related Diseases 2021 The World Federation of Neurology Medal for Services to World Neurology 2021 The 41st T S Srinivasan Oration and gold medal and scroll 2020 Distinguished Inaugural Lecture at the foundation of the African Stroke Organization 2020 The American Academy of Neurology Wartenberg Lecture amp Award 2020 Awarded one of the Canadian Medical Association s F N G Starr Award 62 2018 Awarded the Killam Prize in health sciences 2018 Induction into the Canadian Medical Hall of Fame 2017 Prince Mahidol Award in the field of Public Health 63 2016 The McLaughlin Medal of the Royal Society of Canada for research of sustained excellence in medical science 2015 Scientist Career Award Lawson Health Research Institute 64 2014 Fellowship in the Royal Society of Canada 65 2014 Karolinska Stroke Award for Excellence in Stroke Research 66 2013 Chancellor s Award Lecture in Neuroscience and Neurology University of Louisiana 3 2013 Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Medal 3 2012 Order of Ontario 67 68 2010 Ontario Premier s Discovery Award in life sciences and medicine 69 2010 Biomedical Science Ambassador Award Partners In Research 70 2010 International Bial Merit Award in Medical Sciences 71 2010 Leadership in Stroke Medicine Award World Stroke Organization 72 2008 Member of the Order of Canada 73 2006 Distinguished University Professor Western University 74 2005 Fellowship in the Canadian Academy of Health Sciences 75 2005 Thomas Willis Award American Stroke Association 76 2000 Mihara Award in research on cerebrovascular disorders 77 1990 Ontario Trillium Clinical Scientist Award 11 78 1989 Featured in Canadian Who s Who 10 Honorary degrees edit Hachinski holds four honorary doctorates The first Doctor of Medicine honoris causa from the University of Salamanca Spain the oldest university of the Spanish speaking world was awarded in 2000 79 This was followed by Doctor of the University honoris causa from the University of Buenos Aires Argentina 2005 80 81 Doctor of Medicine honoris causa from the University of Cordoba Argentina 2007 82 and Doctor honoris causa from the Russian Academy of Medical Sciences 2012 3 83 References edit Dr Vladimir Hachinski Western University Faculty Profile www schulich uwo ca Retrieved 2016 05 31 Vladimir Hachinski CM MD DSc FRCPC Doctor honoris causaX4 www robarts ca Retrieved 2022 08 16 a b c d e f g h i j Department of Clinical Neurological Sciences at Western University Vladimir Hachinski Faculty Profile www cnsuwo ca Retrieved 2016 05 31 a b Order of Canada Citation Retrieved 2016 05 31 A stroke of genius PDF Dementia Action Alliance researchmedia eu Retrieved 2016 06 13 Donnan Geoffrey A Fisher Marc Macleod Malcolm Davis Stephen M May 2008 Stroke The Lancet 371 9624 1612 1623 doi 10 1016 S0140 6736 08 60694 7 PMID 18468545 S2CID 208787942 Langhorne Peter Ramachandra Samantha Stroke Unit Trialists Collaboration 23 April 2020 Organised inpatient stroke unit care for stroke network meta analysis The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 4 4 CD000197 doi 10 1002 14651858 CD000197 pub4 ISSN 1469 493X PMC 7197653 PMID 32324916 Soros P Hachinski V 2012 Cardiovascular and neurological causes of sudden death after ischaemic stroke Lancet Neurol 11 2 179 88 doi 10 1016 S1474 4422 11 70291 5 PMID 22265213 S2CID 661118 a b Arculus Paul Former PPHS graduate now heads World Federation of Neurology Port Perry and Scugog Township Heritage Gallery scugogheritage com Retrieved 2016 05 31 a b c d e Canadian who s who Volume XXIV 1989 Simpson Kieran ed University of Toronto Press 1988 a b c d e f Dr Vladimir Hachinski CM MD FRCPC DSc Canadians for Health Research chrcrm org Retrieved 2016 05 31 Hachinski VC Lassen NA Marshall J 27 July 1974 Multi infarct dementia A cause of mental deterioration in the elderly Lancet 2 7874 207 10 doi 10 1016 s0140 6736 74 91496 2 PMID 4135618 Alagiakrishnan Kannayiram Memon Mohammed A Vascular Dementia MedScape Background Retrieved 2016 05 31 Hachinski Vladimir Ostergaard Leif June 2021 The Ambibaric Brain Pathophysiological and Clinical Implications Stroke 52 6 e259 e262 doi 10 1161 STROKEAHA 120 033492 PMID 33940956 S2CID 233719602 Hachinski V C Iliff L D Zilhka E Du Boulay G H McAllister V L Marshall J Russell R W R Symon L 1 September 1975 Cerebral Blood Flow in Dementia Archives of Neurology 32 9 632 637 doi 10 1001 archneur 1975 00490510088009 PMID 1164215 Hachinski Vladimir Oveisgharan S Romney AK Shankle WR 1 February 2012 Optimizing the Hachinski Ischemic Scale Archives of Neurology 69 2 169 75 doi 10 1001 archneurol 2011 1698 PMID 21987392 Steingart A Hachinski V C Lau C Fox A J Diaz F Cape R Lee D Inzitari D Merskey H 1 January 1987 Cognitive and Neurologic Findings in Subjects With Diffuse White Matter Lucencies on Computed Tomographic Scan Leuko Araiosis Archives of Neurology 44 1 32 35 doi 10 1001 archneur 1987 00520130024012 PMID 3800719 Aminoff Michael Jeffrey 2008 01 01 Neurology and General Medicine Elsevier Health Sciences p 128 ISBN 978 0443067075 Hachinski V C Potter P Merskey H 1 January 1987 Leuko Araiosis Archives of Neurology 44 1 21 23 doi 10 1001 archneur 1987 00520130013009 PMID 3800716 Hachinski Vladimir 1994 Vascular Dementia A Radical Redefinition Dementia and Geriatric Cognitive Disorders 5 3 4 130 132 doi 10 1159 000106709 PMID 8087166 Bowler JV Hachinski V August 1995 Vascular cognitive impairment a new approach to vascular dementia Bailliere s Clinical Neurology 4 2 357 76 PMID 7496625 Cappa S F 2008 Cognitive Neurology A Clinical Textbook Oxford University Press p 258 ISBN 9780198569275 Hachinski V 12 September 1992 Preventable senility a call for action against the vascular dementias Lancet 340 8820 645 8 doi 10 1016 0140 6736 92 92177 h PMID 1355217 S2CID 30957302 Hachinski V C Bowler J V Loeb C 1 October 1993 Vascular dementia Neurology 43 10 2159 60 author reply 2160 1 doi 10 1212 wnl 43 10 2159 a PMID 8414002 S2CID 40803369 Hachinski Vladimir Iadecola Costantino Petersen Ron C Breteler Monique M Nyenhuis David L Black Sandra E Powers William J DeCarli Charles Merino Jose G Kalaria Raj N Vinters Harry V Holtzman David M Rosenberg Gary A Wallin Anders Dichgans Martin Marler John R Leblanc Gabrielle G September 2006 National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke Canadian Stroke Network Vascular Cognitive Impairment Harmonization Standards Stroke 37 9 2220 2241 doi 10 1161 01 STR 0000237236 88823 47 PMID 16917086 S2CID 10272849 Langhorne P Williams B O Gilchrist W Howie K August 1993 Do stroke units save lives The Lancet 342 8868 395 398 doi 10 1016 0140 6736 93 92813 9 PMID 8101901 S2CID 1756294 Sinha S Warburton E A September 2000 The evolution of stroke units towards a more intensive approach QJM 93 9 633 638 doi 10 1093 qjmed 93 9 633 PMID 10984558 Cote R Hachinski V C Shurvell B L Norris J W Wolfson C July 1986 The Canadian Neurological Scale a preliminary study in acute stroke Stroke 17 4 731 737 doi 10 1161 01 str 17 4 731 PMID 3738958 Oppenheimer SM Hachinski VC February 1992 The cardiac consequences of stroke Neurologic Clinics 10 1 167 76 doi 10 1016 S0733 8619 18 30239 1 PMID 1557001 Oppenheimer Stephen M Cechetto DF Hachinski VC 1 May 1990 Cerebrogenic Cardiac Arrhythmias Archives of Neurology 47 5 513 9 doi 10 1001 archneur 1990 00530050029008 PMID 2185720 Oppenheimer S M Gelb A Girvin J P Hachinski V C 1 September 1992 Cardiovascular effects of human insular cortex stimulation Neurology 42 9 1727 32 doi 10 1212 wnl 42 9 1727 PMID 1513461 S2CID 32371468 A stroke of genius PDF Understanding vascular mechanisms gt Stroke Related Research gt par 3 Retrieved 2016 05 31 Hachinski Vladimir Einhaupl Karl Ganten Detlev Alladi Suvarna Brayne Carol Stephan Blossom C M Sweeney Melanie D Zlokovic Berislav Iturria Medina Yasser Iadecola Costantino Nishimura Nozomi Schaffer Chris B Whitehead Shawn N Black Sandra E Ostergaard Leif 2019 09 22 Special topic section linkages among cerebrovascular cardiovascular and cognitive disorders Preventing dementia by preventing stroke The Berlin Manifesto International Journal of Stroke 174749301987191 doi 10 1177 1747493019871915 ISSN 1747 4930 PMID 31543058 S2CID 202732274 Hachinski Vladimir Ganten Detlev Lackland Daniel Kreutz Reinhold Tsioufis Konstantinos Hacke Werner 2018 10 17 Implementing the Proclamation of Stroke and Potentially Preventable Dementias International Journal of Stroke 13 8 780 786 doi 10 1177 1747493018799965 ISSN 1747 4930 PMID 30328803 S2CID 53528721 Hachinski Vladimir 2021 08 10 Brain Health Curbing Stroke Heart Disease and Dementia The 2020 Wartenberg Lecture Neurology 97 6 273 279 doi 10 1212 WNL 0000000000012103 ISSN 0028 3878 PMID 33883239 S2CID 233349756 Hachinski Vladimir Avan Abolfazl Gilliland Jason Oveisgharan Shahram May 2021 A new definition of brain health The Lancet Neurology 20 5 335 336 doi 10 1016 s1474 4422 21 00102 2 ISSN 1474 4422 PMID 33894188 S2CID 233328835 Gent M Blakely J A Easton J D Ellis D J Hachinski V C Harbison J W Panak E Roberts R S Sicurella J Turpie A G October 1988 The Canadian American Ticlopidine Study CATS in thromboembolic stroke Design organization and baseline results Stroke 19 10 1203 1210 doi 10 1161 01 str 19 10 1203 PMID 3051529 Gent Michael Donald Easton J Hachinski VladimirC Panak Edouard Sicurella Jane Blakely JohnA Ellis DavidJ Harbison JohnW Roberts RobinS Turpie AlexanderG G June 1989 The Canadian American Ticlopidine Study Cats in Thromboembolic Stroke The Lancet 333 8649 1215 1220 doi 10 1016 s0140 6736 89 92327 1 PMID 2566778 S2CID 22484643 EC IC Bypass Study Group 7 November 1985 Failure of Extracranial Intracranial Arterial Bypass to Reduce the Risk of Ischemic Stroke New England Journal of Medicine 313 19 1191 1200 doi 10 1056 NEJM198511073131904 PMID 2865674 Canadian Stroke Network Annual Report 2002 2003 PDF p 7 Retrieved 2016 05 31 Chan Richard Promoting Adherence to a Regimen of risk factor modification by Trained Non medical personnel Evaluated against Regular practice Study International Standard Randomised Controlled Trial Number ISRCTN Registry doi 10 1186 isrctn07607027 Ontario Stroke System Overview PDF Ontario College of Family Physicians ocfp on ca 2011 04 18 Retrieved 2016 05 31 Advocating for global stroke and dementia strategy London Health Sciences Centre 2016 02 22 Retrieved 2016 06 01 Sposato Luciano A Kapral Moira K Fang Jiming Gill Sudeep S Hackam Daniel G Cipriano Lauren E Hachinski Vladimir 1 December 2015 Declining Incidence of Stroke and Dementia Coincidence or Prevention Opportunity JAMA Neurology 72 12 1529 31 doi 10 1001 jamaneurol 2015 2816 PMID 26658969 Hachinski Vladimir the Dementia Prevention Initiative 2022 02 01 The comprehensive customized cost effective approach CCCAP to prevention of dementia Alzheimer s amp Dementia 18 8 1565 1568 doi 10 1002 alz 12586 ISSN 1552 5260 PMID 35103397 S2CID 246444750 Avan Abolfazl Hachinski Vladimir Brain Health Learn and Act Group 2021 09 27 Brain health Key to health productivity and well being Alzheimer s amp Dementia 18 7 1396 1407 doi 10 1002 alz 12478 ISSN 1552 5260 PMID 34569702 S2CID 237942165 Hachinski Vladimir 2015 Stroke and potentially preventable dementias proclamation updated World Stroke Day proclamation Stroke 46 11 3039 3040 doi 10 1161 strokeaha 115 011237 PMID 26504189 S2CID 36897508 Neuropenews Interview with Vladimir Hachinski eanpages News Blog of the European Academy of Neurology Retrieved 2016 06 06 World Brain Alliance www wfneurology org Retrieved 2016 06 06 Hachinski V 10 June 2013 Neurology in a globalizing world World Congress of Neurology Vienna 2013 Neurology 80 24 2248 2249 doi 10 1212 WNL 0b013e318296ea48 PMID 23751918 Officers Past Presidents www wfneurology org Retrieved 2016 06 06 Aarli Johan A 2014 05 08 The History of the World Federation of Neurology The First 50 Years OUP Oxford p 99 ISBN 9780191022111 World Stroke Organization Elections Results WSO Board of Directors www world stroke org Retrieved 2016 06 06 Hachinski Vladimir September 2008 World Stroke Day Proclamation Stroke 39 9 2409 2420 doi 10 1161 STROKEAHA 107 000009 Hachinski Vladimir September 2008 World Stroke Day 2008 Stroke 39 9 2407 2408 doi 10 1161 STROKEAHA 108 531681 PMID 18723419 Hachinski K V Hachinski V 1 August 1994 Music and the brain CMAJ 151 3 293 296 PMC 1336919 PMID 8039082 Hachinski Vladimir Hachinski Larissa 2003 01 01 Stroke A Comprehensive Guide to brain Attacks Everything You Need to Know Firefly Books p ix ISBN 9781552096420 Academicos correspondientes ANLE Academia Norteamericana de la Lengua Espanola ANLE in Spanish Retrieved 2016 06 08 Aranda Alejandro 1990 Resonancias Madrid Editorial Pliegos ISBN 9788486214647 Wallace Janice 2013 06 20 Western News Partnership captures a beautiful Dream for professors Western News Retrieved 2016 06 08 Hachinski Vladimir 2016 Undreamt dreams can happen Hektoen International 8 2 ISSN 2155 3017 Retrieved 2016 06 08 Change agents in health care CMA presents recipients of 2020 CMA Awards Canadian Medical Association 10 August 2020 Archived from the original on 10 August 2020 Retrieved 10 August 2020 Announcement of the Prince Mahidol Award 2016 www princemahidolaward org Archived from the original on 2017 11 14 Retrieved 2017 06 13 Celebrating research excellence and innovation St Joseph s Health Care London www sjhc london on ca Retrieved 2016 06 13 Search Fellows The Royal Society of Canada www rsc src ca Retrieved 2016 06 14 Two researchers share the Karolinska Stroke Award Karolinska Institutet Retrieved 2016 06 13 25 Appointees Named to Ontario s Highest Honour news ontario ca Retrieved 2016 06 13 Order of Ontario Appointees by year of Appointment www citizenship gov on ca Retrieved 2016 06 13 Premier s Discovery Awards download required Ontario ca 2013 06 06 Retrieved 2016 06 13 Biomedical Science Ambassador Award Partners In Research Partners In Research Retrieved 2016 06 13 BIAL Award 2010 www bial com Retrieved 2016 06 13 WSO 2010 Awards www2 kenes com Retrieved 2016 06 13 The Governor General of Canada Honours Order of Canada Recipients gg ca Retrieved 2016 06 13 Distinguished University Professor Awards Office of the President Western University president uwo ca Retrieved 2016 06 13 CAHS Fellows Directory Canadian Academy of Health Sciences Academie canadianne des sciences de la sante cahs acss ca Archived from the original on 2017 05 23 Retrieved 2016 06 13 Canadian neurologist wins highest award as American Stroke Association honors five EurekAlert Retrieved 2016 06 13 Charitable Trust Mihara Cerebrovascular Disorder Research Promotion Fund Mihara Award Past Winners www mihara umin jp Retrieved 2016 06 13 Port Perry Scugog Township Heritage Gallery www scugogheritage com Retrieved 2016 06 13 Dr Vladimir Hachinski s brush with royalty Schulich School of Medicine amp Dentistry Western University www schulich uwo ca Retrieved 2016 06 13 Distincion para el neurologo Vladimir Hachinski Universidad de Buenos Aires www uba ar in Spanish Retrieved 2016 06 13 La UBA comenzo a celebrar los primeros 190 anos de historia Dias de Historia in Spanish Retrieved 2016 06 13 Honoris Causa para destacado neurologo canadiense Universidad Nacional de Cordoba www unc edu ar in Spanish Retrieved 2016 06 13 CASAGIT CASAGIT Prof Vladimir Hachinski www casagit it Retrieved 2016 06 13 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Vladimir Hachinski amp oldid 1211016945, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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