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Thursday, September 12, 2019

First Look: West Virginia University's Rockefeller Neuroscience Institute

By   September11, 2019



Walking through the new WVU Rockefeller Neuroscience Institute's Innovation Center, you get the feeling you're trodding into the future of the treatment of brain disorders and the scientific methods to improve human performance.

One device, with only a handful in the world like it, delivers focused ultrasound from 1,000 different ultrasound emitters in a single helmet that is placed on the head. It has already been used by WVU Medicine doctors to successfully open the blood-brain barrier to allow for better treatment of people with Alzheimer's disease. Another system has the patient puts on a multicolored cap with emitters and a handheld wand delivers transcranial magnetic stimulation to treat addiction and Alzheimer's. And around the innovation center, there's technology from souped-up gaming systems and virtual reality to a cryogenic chamber to speed workout recovery and a system that maps the nervous system, from head to toe.

And that's just scratching RNI's surface.

When the Rockefeller family and WVU Medicine envisioned the WVU Rockefeller Neuroscience Institute, they sought a center that would draw leading experts in the fields of brain science and human performance as well as a place where cutting-edge treatments could be developed and deployed. That's coming to fruition in the WVU Rockefeller Neuroscience Institute, which opened officially earlier this year and has been breaking ground in the field. The finishing touches are being put on the Innovation Center, on the WVU Health System campus in Morgantown, West Virginia, where researchers are working and where patients will be welcomed for the latest advances.


It's a partnership between former U.S. Sen. John D. Rockefeller IV and his family along with WVU Medicine and West Virginia University to bring together care, research and teaching centered in Morgantown but spreading all the way through WVU Medicine's footprint. 

It's led by Dr. Ali R. Rezai, a world-renowned neurosurgeon who has developed innovations to treat paralysis, Parkinson's disease, Alzheimer's disease and other afflictions.

And it's that innovative spirit - and approach from many different specialities, as well as government and industry collaborations - that Rezai is bringing to bear at RNI.

"We're always looking at rapid applications of new technology, and being one of the first in the world to do it," Rezai said. "That's one of our missions: Quickly deploy technology for patients.

RNI and WVU Medicine have been in growth mode, part of a lot of building projects on the Morgantown campus. There are now 145 faculty, 73 residents and postdoctoral fellows and more than 700 clinic, research and administrative staff in four departments: neuroscience, neurology, neurosurgery and behavioral medicine and psychiatry. And there are several current and future RNI facilities. Beyond the Innovation Center, there's also a neuro ambulatory and education center that is being built atop the nearby physician's office center, the Erma Byrd Biomedical Research Center and a behavioral center at Chestnut Ridge. Then there's also a brain and spine hospital that will be built in the parking lot behind the hospital.

https://www.bizjournals.com/pittsburgh/news/2019/09/11/first-look-west-virginia-universitys-rockefeller.html

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