Michael Strupp
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Michael Strupp, MD, FRCP, FANA, FEAN, Professor of Neurology, studied medicine at the Technical University of Aachen and in Rochester, N.Y. Then he worked for three years in basic neurophysiological research, mainly doing patch-clamp recordings (at Baylor College, Houston, in Montpellier and in Munich), before he moved to the Department of Neurology at the University and the German Centre for Vertigo and Balance Disorders at the University of Munich, Germany. 

His particular area of interest is the diagnosis and therapy of vestibular, ocular motor and cerebellar disorders. He is very much engaged in the “International Classification of Vestibular Disorders” of the classification committee of the Bárány Society. He is currently Editor-in-Chief of Frontiers in Neuro-otology and Joint Chief Editor of the Journal of Neurology. He has received many clinical and scientific awards, including the Hallpike-Nylen Award 2106 and the Galenus von Pergamon award 2020, is a very passionate teacher and was awarded ‘Best Teacher’ by the German Neurological Society. 

Thomas Brandt, FRCP, FANA, FEAN, Professor of Neurology, German Center for Vertigo and Balance Disorders, Ludwig-Maximilians University, Munich, Germany studied medicine at the Universities of Cologne and Essen, Germany. His clinical training was under Richard Jung in Neurology and Clinical Neurophysiology in Freiburg, Germany. From 1976 to 1984 he was Director of the Neurological Clinic of the Alfried Krupp Hospital in Essen, and from 1984 to 2008 Chairman of Neurology and Director of the Department of Neurology, LMU, Munich, Germany. He holds a Hertie Senior Research Professorship since 2008 and was also Chief Executive Director of the German Center for Vertigo and Balance Disorders of LMU, Munich. Prof. Brandt was formerly President of the German Neurological Society, the German Society for Clinical Neurophysiology and Functional Imaging, the International Society for Posture and Gait Research, and the European Neurological Society. He is an honorary member of the German, British, and French Neurological Societies, a member of the European Academy of Sciences and Art, a member of the Bavarian Academy of Sciences, and of the German Academy of Life Scientists, Leopoldina. Awards include the Srinivasan Gold Medal, the Betty and David Koetser Prize for Brain Research, the Bárány Gold Medal, the Doctor Robert Pfleger Award, the Hans Berger Prize, the Wilhelm Erb Medal, the Federal Cross of Merit, Germany, 2016 Charles Eduard Brown-Séquard Lecture, EAN, Copenhagen, and 2017 Masland Award Lecture, WCN, Tokyo.


Major research fields: general neurology and management of dizzy patients, basic mechanisms of vertigo, balance and ocular motor disorders, locomotion, visual-vestibular interaction, motion perception, spatial orientation, and navigation. Applied methods are stance and gait analysis, eye movement recordings, other neurophysiological measures, as well as psychophysics, functional imaging with MRI and PET, and modelling sensorimotor control. 

Marianne Dieterich, FANA, FEAN, Professor of Neurology, Department of Neurology and German Center for Vertigo and Balance Disorders,Ludwig-Maximilians University, Munich, Germany studied medicine at the universities of Bochum and Essen, Germany. She is a specialist in the field of neuroophthalmology, neuro-otology, balance disorders, brainstem syndromes and general neurology. Trained under Thomas Brandt in Neurology and Clinical Neurophysiology at the LMU, Munich, Germany, she received a Heisenberg Professorship and was research fellow (1993-1994) in the primate laboratory of the vestibular research lab of Prof. Volker Henn, Zurich, Switzerland. From 1995 to 2001 she was Head of the Clinical Research Group “Vestibular System” at the Department of Neurology, LMU, Munich, and became than Chairperson of Neurology and Director of the Department of Neurology of the University of Mainz, Germany, from 2001 to 2008. Since 2008 she is Chairperson of Neurology and Director of the Department of Neurology, LMU, Munich. She was formerly President of the German Neurological Society and the German Society for Clinical Neurophysiology and Functional Imaging. Awards include the Hedon Award for neurobiology of the vestibular system, the Elfriede-Aulhorn Award for Neuro-Ophthalmology of the German Ophthalmological Society, the Vertigo Award of the German Neurological Society, the Award for outstanding teaching of the German Society of Clinical Neurophysiology and Functional Imaging and the Hallpike-Nylén Award of the International Bárány Society. She is fellow of the American Neurological Association and the European Academy of Neurology, a member of the Bavarian Academy of Sciences, a member of the European Academy of Sciences and Art, and member of the scientific board of the German Federal Medical Council, Berlin.


Her scientific interest covers the different types of dizziness and balance disorders from structural organic to functional with a particular methodological focus on neurophysiology and imaging (MRI, PET, EEG) of the visual and vestibular systems.