Répertoire des subventions financées

Filtrer par

683 ésultat(s) trouvé(s)

Towards inclusive genetic and protein biomarkers for improved multiple sclerosis risk stratification and etiology

  • Type de subvention

    Capacity building grants

  • Domaine de recherche

    Neurodegeneration

  • Disease Area

    Multiple Sclerosis

  • Compétition

    Future Leaders in Canadian Brain Research

  • Province

    Québec

  • Date de Début

    2024

  • Montant total du financement

    $100,000

  • Contribution Santé Canada

    $50,000

Aperçu du projet

Canada has one of the world’s highest rates of multiple sclerosis (MS), a disease that can lead to significant disability. There is growing evidence that MS might be preventable, presenting an exciting opportunity. However, achieving this goal requires that we better understand the causes of MS and develop biomarkers that…

A physiologic-to-tissue level approach to characterize the pathophysiology of hypoxic ischemic brain injury in humans.

  • Type de subvention

    Capacity building grants

  • Domaine de recherche

    Accident vasculaire cérébral et lésion cérébrale

  • Disease Area

    Stroke

  • Compétition

    Future Leaders in Canadian Brain Research

  • Province

    British Columbia

  • Date de Début

    2024

  • Montant total du financement

    $100,000

  • Contribution Santé Canada

    $50,000

Aperçu du projet

During a cardiac arrest, when the heart stops beating, blood flow and the delivery of the oxygen to the brain stops. This lack of blood flow and oxygen leads to a severe brain injury called a hypoxic-ischemic brain injury. Even if the heart starts beating again following cardiopulmonary resuscitation, patients…

Human choroid plexus organoids to investigate unexplored mechanisms and secreted biomarkers in neurodevelopmental disease

  • Type de subvention

    Capacity building grants

  • Domaine de recherche

    Neurodegeneration

  • Disease Area

    Epilepsy

  • Compétition

    Future Leaders in Canadian Brain Research

  • Province

    British Columbia

  • Date de Début

    2024

  • Montant total du financement

    $100,000

  • Contribution Santé Canada

    $50,000

Aperçu du projet

Our brains are built by neural stem cells (NSCs), which produce all the neurons and other specialized cells that form the brain and execute its functions. We understand many of the internal processes NSCs use to control which cells they will produce and when. However, we also know the environment…

Polygenic applications of aging to brain and cognitive reserve in multiple sclerosis

  • Type de subvention

    Capacity building grants

  • Domaine de recherche

    Neurodegeneration

  • Disease Area

    Multiple Sclerosis

  • Compétition

    Future Leaders in Canadian Brain Research

  • Province

    Manitoba

  • Date de Début

    2024

  • Montant total du financement

    $100,000

  • Contribution Santé Canada

    $50,000

Aperçu du projet

Reserve is someone's ability to tolerate age-related changes and disease-related insults to their brain without developing symptoms. How reserve contributes specifically to multiple sclerosis disease is unknown. There are two types of reserve: "Brain reserve" which is like an individual's "hardware", and "cognitive reserve" which is your "software". Whether differences…

Dissecting brain-wide functional circuits underlying social decision making by developing a naturalistic virtual reality platform of juvenile zebrafish

  • Type de subvention

    Capacity building grants

  • Domaine de recherche

    Central Nervous System

  • Disease Area

    Other

  • Compétition

    Future Leaders in Canadian Brain Research

  • Province

    Ontario

  • Date de Début

    2024

  • Montant total du financement

    $100,000

  • Contribution Santé Canada

    $50,000

Aperçu du projet

Understanding how the brain works when we make decisions during social interactions has been difficult for neuroscientists. This is because our brains process multiple things all at once all the time, and different regions of the brain need to communicate with each other to process information. Previous studies have found…