A webinar on the subject of How Cavernoma Grow : The role of a gene mutation (PIK3CA) linked to some Cancers with David White (Science of Cavernoma).
Recorded May 6th 2021
Acknowledgement
David's webinar draws on material provided by an article on the Angioma Alliance's website. You can find this article at the link below;
www.angioma.org/new-cancer-co...
About Cavernoma
A cavernoma is made up of abnormal blood vessels and can be found in the brain and/or spinal cord and looks like a raspberry.
1 person in 600, in the UK, has a brain cavernoma without symptoms (asymptomatic). This equates to roughly 90,000 people - enough to fill Wembley Stadium. A spinal cavernoma is rarer than a brain cavernoma.
In a series of webinars and supporting blogs, Cavernoma Alliance UK's scientific advisor Professor David White will help us make sense of Cavernomas, how they form, and much, much more.
Davids blogs, supporting notes and details can be found at cavernoma.org.uk/science/
For more information about Cavernoma Alliance UK, please visit cavernoma.org.uk/
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