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¹û¶³Ó°Ôº Queen Square Institute of Neurology

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Division of Neuropathology

The Division of Neuropathology at Queen Square is a leading academic and diagnostic neuropathology department in the UK. The department provides services for the National Hospital of Neurology and Neurosurgery, ¹û¶³Ó°Ôº Hospital, and receives a substantial number of national referrals.


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Immunostaining request form for external users
Molecular pathology request form


Staff members of the Division of Neuropathology

Queen Square

Molecular pathology

We offer DNA methylation profiling for advanced diagnostics and prognostication of brain tumours.
For routine diagnostics we offer targeted sequencing (IDH, BRAF, TERT, Histone), copy number assays 1p/19q, EGFR, CDKN2A/B) and MGMT promoter methylation.Ìý

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Adult muscle and nerve

We provide a diagnostic service and support the mitochondrial disease and the McArdle’s disease NCG services.

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Dubowitz Neuromuscular Centre

Specialised in neuromuscular disorders affecting children and young adults. We provide the diagnostic neuropathology for Congenital Muscular Dystrophies and Congenital Myopathies

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Brain autopsies

We perform autopsies on brains including high risk (prion diseases, Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease).

Enquiries:Ìý¹û¶³Ó°ÔºH.office.neuropathology@nhs.net

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¹û¶³Ó°Ôº IQPath

Research histology facility, digital pathology and image analysis on the highest technical level.
Enquiries: ucl.iqpath@ucl.ac.uk

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Clinical Trial support

We support numerous clinical trials, by providing tissue or molecular data, and we can provide input to the pathology workflow in clinical trial design.
Please contact ¹û¶³Ó°ÔºH.trials.neuropathology@nhs.net to get in touch and to request tissue. Please be advised that we do not run clinical trials and we cannot advise on the eligibility and suitability of patients for clinical trials.

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Access to tissue resources for research

We can make our archival diagnostic tissue samples available to researchers. A simple and effective approval process can be used to access them for your research project. Read more....

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Electron microscopy

Comprehensive facilities for specimen preparation and access to Transmission Electron Microscopes at Great Ormond Street Hospitals. We provide diagnostic services only

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Neuropathology & neurotoxicity of prion diseases

Prof. Sebastian Brandner, in collaboration with Department of Neurodegenerative DiseaseÌýandÌý

The principal focus of the MRC Prion Unit is on the human prion disease, and the research strategy is aimed at both rapid developments to target these areas of public health concern and a long term approach to the understanding of prion disease and the wider relevance of prion-like molecular mechanisms in pathobiology


Neuropathology of epilepsy

Dr Maria Thom is affiliated with the Department of Clinical and Experimental Epilepsy

In the recent years we have focused studies on specific pathologies including hippocampal sclerosis. In our post mortem series we have, using stereological analysis, examined the distribution of cell loss along the longitudinal axis, noting variability of the pattern in relation to patients seizures. We have been examining the differences in patterns of interneuronal loss in the hippocampus in relation to seizures. We have published studies on the severity of Alzheimer-type pathology in a large post-mortem series of patients with epilepsy and correlated accelerated aging with evidence of old traumatic brain injury incurred as a result of seizures. We are also studying the contribution of immature and progenitor cells types, including doublecortin, NG2 and nestin-positive neurones in the pathology focal cortical dysplasia (FCD). We have recently explored the mechanisms of altered patterns of myelination observed in FCD. We have studied the immunophenotype and molecular-genetic characteristics of subtypes of long-term epilepsy-associated tumours (LEATs). In sudden and unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP) we have been identifying the distribution of acute neuronal injury through neuronal expression of HIF1 alpha and VEGF.