The Malta Independent 24 April 2024, Wednesday
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Alfred Mizzi Foundation donates €150,000 to RIDT for stroke research

Monday, 11 September 2017, 15:07 Last update: about 8 years ago

The Alfred Mizzi Foundation (TAMF), the University of Malta (UM) and the RIDT (Research, Innovation & Development Trust) have signed an agreement through which TAMF will be financing a research project related to strokes. The donation amounts to €150,000, and is the largest single monetary donation since the setting up of the RIDT.

The signatories of the Agreement were University of Malta Rector, Prof. Alfred Vella, Mr Mario Grech and Mr Charles Zammit on behalf of RIDT and Mr Derek Vella on behalf of TAMF (Chairman). The signing took place in the presence of Mr Chris Briffa, Trustee of TAMF, Prof. Mario Valentino and Prof. Richard Muscat, both involved in the research project, and Wilfred Kenely CEO of RIDT.

The Project deals with the 'Sensory Stimulation as a Novel Treatment Strategy to salvage the Brain during a Stroke'. The Research Team consists of Prof M. Valentino (lead), Dr C. Zammit, Dr J. Vella, Mr R. Zammit and Prof. R. Muscat.

Despite major advances in prevention and rehabilitation, few neurological injuries are as debilitating as stroke. The disease is currently the third leading cause of death and the leading cause of long-term disability worldwide. It is similarly devastating in Malta. According to the latest WHO data published in May 2014, 132 men and 102 women per 100,000 died from strokes in Malta in 2011, which means that stroke was the third most common cause of death in men and the second most common in women, reaching 10.41% of total deaths. Stroke is also the most common cause of severe disability in Malta with one in four men and one in five women expected to have a stroke by the age of 85.

Unfortunately, current options for acute treatment are extremely limited and there is an urgent need for new treatment strategies. Emerging new research shows strong evidence that mild sensory stimulation can completely protect the jeopardized brain from an impending stroke in a rodent model. When delivered within the first 2 hours following stroke, this stimulation resulted in complete protection, including a full reestablishment of cortical function, sensorimotor capabilities, and blood flow.

This recent breakthrough suggests a new, exciting potential avenue for the development of acute stroke treatment strategies that may produce a noninvasive, drug-free, equipment-free, and side effect-free means of protection from ischemic stroke. In this novel research, the scientists at UM intend to explore the cellular and molecular mechanisms of the time-sensitive events that underlie this protection. Such an understanding could lead to the development of drugs that imitate the protective effect of sensory stimulation.

The research being undertaken in the UM laboratories is cutting-edge and unique in Europe. For the first time the researchers can capture 3-D cellular and molecular events deep down into brain structure to study how cells communicate, develop, and how injury and reconstruction occurs under high spatial resolution. From a broader perspective, the researchers also aim to raise more public awareness by promoting a campaign on the importance of recognizing the early signs of stroke, its risk factors and preventative measures, because the longer the delay for evaluation and treatment, the more likely the damage will be irreversible and the higher the chances that the patient will die or experience severe disability.

This project aims to help around 400 people a year who suffer a stroke in Malta.

To achieve its goals, this ambitious research requires significant funding. To date, the research group has benefitted from European structural funds for some equipment. This research is expected to advance understanding and treatment of vascular diseases in human subjects and assist work in the pursuit of excellence.

Professor Alfred Vella commented that this donation confirmed the community's appreciation for the UM's research ambitions. 'I am pleased to observe that the Alfred Mizzi Foundation and the business community have identified research as a beneficiary for their Corporate Social Responsibility programme,' he said.


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