Education Research Current Organisation and Cooperation NL
Login as
Prospective student Student Employee
Bachelor Master VU for Professionals
Exchange programme VU Amsterdam Summer School Honours programme VU-NT2 Semester in Amsterdam
PhD at VU Amsterdam Research highlights Prizes and distinctions
Research institutes Our scientists Research Impact Support Portal Creating impact
News Events calendar Energy in transition
Israël and Palestinian regions Women at the top Culture on campus
Practical matters Mission and core values Entrepreneurship on VU Campus
Organisation Partnerships Alumni University Library Working at VU Amsterdam
Sorry! De informatie die je zoekt, is enkel beschikbaar in het Engels.
This programme is saved in My Study Choice.
Something went wrong with processing the request.
Something went wrong with processing the request.

Interview with Marjo van der Knaap

A career devoted to the battle against deadly brain disease
One in every thousand children has abnormalities of the white matter of the brain. Many of these disorders are genetically determined and progressive, associated with a fatal outcome. Paediatric neurologist Marjo van der Knaap has been investigating childhood white matter disorders for the past 25 years and has achieved some important breakthroughs that clear the way for an effective therapy. She hopes to see the search for a cure to be successful in her lifetime.

“Of course I’m upset every time a child dies. It breaks my heart to have to tell parents that their child has a leukodystrophy, and only has a short life ahead. But my job is to support them in their hour of need, to explain how we are going to deal with each and every problem. When I do that, I make the situation bearable for the parents. If I give way to my emotions, I cannot perform this role properly.” Marjo van der Knaap (born 1958) is professor of Paediatric Neurology at the VU Medical Centre in Amsterdam, where she performs research on white matter disorders in children. Leukodystrophies have catastrophic consequences, but Prof. Van der Knaap sees this as a challenge: “I’m not the kind of person you can get to do fundamental research on the common cold. Leukodystrophies are a terrible problem. We have to find a solution for them.”

Read full interview

Marjo van der Knaap interview

Quick links

Homepage Culture on campus VU Sports Centre Dashboard

Study

Academic calendar Study guide Timetable Canvas

Featured

VUfonds VU Magazine Ad Valvas

About VU

Contact us Working at VU Amsterdam Faculties Divisions
Privacy Disclaimer Veiligheid Webcolofon Cookies Webarchief

Copyright © 2024 - Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam