Dr. Jeffrey Saver, director of the UCLA Comprehensive Stroke since its inception in 1995, has been awarded the American Neurological Association’s 2015 Soriano Leadership Award.
A leader in cerebrovascular research and clinical care, Saver was among nine leading neurologists and neuroscientists honored at the association’s 140th annual meeting, held Sept. 26-29 in Chicago. His research focuses on stroke prevention, acute stroke treatment, stroke diagnosis and the neurocognitive and neurobehavioral consequences of stroke.
As part of the award, Saver lectured on recent breakthroughs in the treatment of acute stroke, the second leading cause of death and disability worldwide. He discussed using clot-dissolving medications and clot-removing devices together to reopen blocked blood vessels and restore blood flow to threatened brain tissue.
A senior associate vice chair of neurology at UCLA, Saver trained at Harvard Medical School, the Harvard-Longwood Neurology Training Program, the University of Iowa and Brown. He is the author of over 470 research articles, two books and 35 book chapters.
Saver served as principal investigator of the National Institutes of Health-National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke’s FAST-MAG trial. The eight-year study found that, by working with paramedics in the field, intravenous medications can be given to stroke patients within the “golden hour,” the window in which patients have the best chance to survive and avoid debilitating, long-term neurological damage.
Saver also served as chair of the American Heart Association Stroke Council. He currently is associate editor at JAMA, the Journal of the American Medical Association, and consulting editor at the journal Stroke.
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