European
Stroke Conference
The European
Stroke Conference was founded in 1990 by M.G. Hennerici (Germany) and J.
Bogousslavsky (Switzerland). The first meeting was held in Düsseldorf and was
attended by about 500 people – and proved to be a great success. At that time
only the North American conference existed for clinical researchers and basic
scientists to present data from stroke research. The prospect to establish
another European stroke meeting was highly challenging. After biannual meetings,
1992 in Lausanne and 1994 in Stockholm and increasing attendance, however, the
ESC became an annual, international, well-received and continuously growing
stroke conference.
This successful meeting took place in the following European cities from 1990 -
2009
I. Düsseldorf, Germany 1990
II.
Lausanne, Switzerland 1992
III.
Stockholm, Sweden 1994
IV.
Bordeaux, France 1995
V.
Munich, Germany 1996
VI.
Amsterdam, The Netherlands 1997
VII.
Edinburgh, United Kingdom 1998
VIII.
Venice, Italy 1999
IX.
Vienna, Austria 2000
X.
Lisbon, Portugal 2001
XI.
Geneva, Switzerland 2002
XII. Valencia, Spain, 21-24 May 2003
XIII.
Mannheim-Heidelberg, Germany, 12-15 May 2004
XIV.
Bologna, Italy, 25-28 May 2005
XV. Brussels,
Belguim 16-19 May 2006
XVI.
Glasgow, United Kingdom 29 May – 1 June 2007
XVII.
Nice, France 13-16 May 2008
XVIII.
Stockholm, Sweden 26 - 29 May 2009
The last ESC
held in Nice, in 2008, was attended by more than 3700 people from 82 countries,
with more than 1000 abstracts submitted and a full four-day programme.
Since 2007 the European Stroke Conference announces a stroke meeting for
nurses – physiotherapists – speech and occupational therapists - study/monitoring
assistants!
Since 2005
the "Johann Jacob Wepfer Award" of the
European Stroke Conference
honors scientists for their outstanding scientific work in the field of
cerebrovascular diseases and significant contributions to our knowledge
about treatment of acute stroke.
This award was dedicated to:
Johann Jacob Wepfer
(December 23, 1620 - January 26,1695) was a Swiss pathologist and
pharmacologist who was a native of Schaffhausen. He studied
medicine in Strasbourg, Basel and Padua, and
in 1647 returned to Schaffhausen to practice medicine.Wepfer is remembered for
his work concerning vascular anatomy of the
brain,
and the study of cerebrovascular disease. He was the first physician to hypothesize
that the effects of a stroke were caused by bleeding in the brain. He also
mentioned that these symptoms could be caused by a blockage of one of the main arteries
that supply blood to the brain. From his
postmortem studies, he provided information
concerning the carotid and vertebral arteries that supply the brain with
blood. in 1658 he published a classic treatise regarding strokes, titled
Historiae apoplecticum.Six years before Willis he made a perfect description
of the polygon of arteries at the bottom of the brain.
Wepfer also made important contributions in the fields of
experimental pharmacology and toxicology.
He performed pioneer research concerning the effects of toxic substances on the heart
and blood's circulatory system. He performed
important experiments concerning the toxicity of water hemlock,
arsenic,
monkshood,
et al.