PhD defence Mohamed Fahmy Abdelaziz Aly Doheim
Supervisors: Prof. Dr. W.H. van Zwam, Prof. Dr. R.J. van Oostenbrugge, Prof. Dr. R.G. Nogueira
Keywords: Ischemic stroke, Personalized medicine, Artificial intelligence, Thrombectomy
"Beyond One-Size-Fits-All in Acute Ischemic Stroke: From Data-Driven Approaches to Personalized Clinical Decision-Making"
This thesis examines whether stroke care can move beyond the “average patient” toward decisions tailored to each individual. Stroke is the world’s second leading cause of death and a major cause of disability, yet treatment guidelines are based on average results across thousands of patients — results that may not apply to the specific person on the stretcher. The research developed and tested new tools, including an artificial intelligence system that estimates how much a particular patient is likely to benefit from clot-removal treatment, and a triage system that helped community hospitals deliver faster care. The studies show that personalising stroke treatment by combining clinical, imaging, and computational data improves outcomes, narrows hospital-level disparities, and supports more honest conversations with patients and families about both the benefits and the risks of treatment.
Click here for the live stream.
Also read
-
PhD defence Louise David
" The Effort of Change: Understanding and Supporting Students’ Sustainable Use of Effective Learning Strategies"PhD defence18 May -
PhD defence Jayendra Sharma
" Universal health coverage in Bhutan: an empirical enquiry"PhD defence18 May -
PhD defence Céline Johanna Angelique van Bilsen
" Mapping COVID-19 Impact: Cross-border Mobility, Social Networks, Vaccination, and Post-COVID Condition"PhD defence19 May