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  China Scholarship Council scheme: Post-stroke changes in energy metabolism and neural representations of upper limb function after transcutaneous vagal nerve stimulation


   Department of Neuroscience

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  Prof Li Su  No more applications being accepted  Competition Funded PhD Project (Students Worldwide)

About the Project

Stroke is one of the leading causes of death and its prevalence has increased in the recent decades. It is also a major cause of disability with approximately 80% of stroke survivors experience upper limb weakness and in 30-60% this persists at 6 months.

PhD candidates with background in either neuroscience, psychology, neuroimaging, computer science, physic or related subjects are welcome to join Professor Li Su’s research group studying cortical representations of upper limb function in patients after stroke, and how such representations change before and after a special treatment called transcutaneous vagus nerve stimulation (tVNS). To reveal neural representation of upper limb functions, a functional MRI (fMRI) paradigm will be applied to patients at baseline and three months after the tVNS treatment. A concurrent PET scan will assess energy metabolism in the brain too. This project will provide the first neuroimaging evidence that successful neurological recovery after stroke is associated with patterns of functional re-organisation that more closely represent the normal pre-morbid state. By following the patients over time, our functional neuroimaging will help understand whether tVNS is promoting desirable plasticity that is beneficial for stroke survivors in the long term.

The student will join an interdisciplinary team as a member of the mechanistic sub-study within a NIHR funded £1.9 million-pound multi-centre (20 UK centres) clinical trial investigating the efficacy of tVNS in upper limb motor recovery in stroke. This study aims to characterise the neuro-anatomical, energy metabolic and serological basis of a novel therapy that shows promising evidence as a potential treatment for arm weakness after stroke (Dawson et al, 2021; Sheharyar et al, 2021). This has several potential implications for further research and clinical practice including optimising the dose and duration of therapy and patient stratification.

The primary supervisor - Professor Li Su is the Chair of Neuroimaging in the Flagship Neuroscience Institute at Sheffield University and Principal Investigator (PI) in Department of Psychiatry at University of Cambridge. He applies innovative and original computational methods with the state-of-the-art brain imaging techniques to understand and develop treatments for neurological conditions. The second supervisor - Professor Arshad Majid is the Chair of Cerebrovascular Disease at the University of Sheffield, has been PI on a number of multicentre trials and is engaged in preclinical and clinical mechanistic studies of tVNS.

Please note, this project is also being advertised under our University of Sheffield Postgraduate Research Scholarships scheme.

Entry requirements:

You must fulfil the eligibility criteria listed here: https://www.sheffield.ac.uk/postgraduate/phd/scholarships/csc

How to apply:

Please complete a University Postgraduate Research Application form available here: https://www.sheffield.ac.uk/postgraduate/phd/apply/applying

Please clearly state the prospective main supervisor in the respective box and select Neuroscience as the department.

Deadline:

Applications close at 5pm Wednesday 26th January 2022.

Enquiries:

Interested candidates should in the first instance contact Prof Su [Email Address Removed]

Biological Sciences (4) Engineering (12) Medicine (26) Psychology (31)

Funding Notes

The University of Sheffield will fund tuition fees for 3.5 years. Students are expected to submit their thesis within this period. CSC will fund a grant for living costs for up to 4 years, and one return flight from China to the UK.
You must be a national of and reside in, mainland China (not including Hong Kong or Macau)

Where will I study?

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