Page results
-
Being diagnosed with cancer can be a difficult time for you and those close to you. This page gives you an overview of the care you can expect to receive as our patient at University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust (UCLH). It also introduces different types of healthcare professionals you may meet along the way.
-
This booklet explains what stem cells are and how they are collected from your blood. It includes information about what happens before, during and after the collection, and how the cells are stored.
-
The flow cytometry laboratory provides a Haematological Malignancy diagnostic service which includes chronic and acute leukaemias and lymphomas.
-
Join in our reflective heart Christmas 2020 campaign! Every year, supporters, staff and friends of UCLH Charity write a message of thanks, celebration or remembrance on a reflective heart together with a donation.
-
The Preterm Birth Clinic is one of a few UK specialist antenatal services that are designed specifically for the needs of pregnant women at risk of premature labour.
-
Professor Hough is a consultant heamatologist at UCLH. She has specialist expertise in the management of acute lymphoblastic leukaemia in teenagers and young adults, and the use of umbilical cord blood as an alternative source of haemopoietic stem cells.
-
Professor Lunn's specialist clinical and research interests are in the inflammatory neuropathies, particularly Guillain-Barré syndrome, CIDP and paraproteinaemic neuropathies.
-
Professor David Choi is a consultant neurosurgeon. He sees patients with common conditions such as back and neck pain, disc problems, nerve root impingement, through to complex problems of spine and skull base tumours, endoscopic and craniocervical junction surgery.
-
Mr Seni Subair specialises in pregnancy and labour care, medical disorders (including perinatal mental health) in pregnancy,
-
Mr Ruwan Wimalasundera is a senior consultant obstetrician and fetal medicine specialist at UCLH. He manages all aspects of pregnancy, including both low -risk and high-risk pregnancies, especially older mothers and multiple pregnancies