Maxwell Damian Editor

Maxwell Damian trained in Germany and the UK, and specialises in genetic muscle disease and in neurocritical care. He was consultant and director of the neurological ICU in the universities of Giessen and Dresden, Germany, before continuing work in the UK, specialising in critical care aspects of neuromuscular disease and in research on hypoxic brain injury. He has been co-chair of the Neurocritical Care scientific panel of the European Academy of Neurology, 2015-2020; chair of the specialist group in Neurocritical Care of the Association of British Neurologists; chair of the accreditation committee of the Neurocritical Care Society, USA. He retired from Cambridge University Hospitals in 2020 but continues research work at the University Department of Anaesthetics, Cambridge University and at the Essex Cardiothoracic Centre, UK.  

Marianne de Visser is an adult neurologist at the Amsterdam University Medical Centers,  location Academic Medical Center in Amsterdam, The Netherlands and emeritus Professor of Neuromuscular Diseases. She was trained at the University Hospital of Amsterdam. In 1988 she was a visiting scientist at Dr. Andrew Engel’s lab at Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota where she performed ultrastructural studies on skeletal muscle in dermatomyositis. She obtained a position at the Department of Neurology of the Academic Medical Center in Amsterdam and was appointed as Professor of Neuromuscular Diseases at the University of Amsterdam in 1993.

Her research interests are rare neuromuscular disorders such as myositis, hereditary neuropathies, postpolio syndrome and motor neuron disorders. Her work on ALS kindled interest in palliative care.

She was a member of the Governing Board of the European Academy of Neurology (EAN), first as Treasurer and subsequently as Secretary-General (2014-2020). She also served on the Management Committee of the World Federation of Neurology (Elected Trustee (2002-2008), Co-opted Trustee (2020-2021)). She was co-chair of the EAN Scientific Panel on Rare Neurological Diseases (2020-2022) and now member of the Management Group.