荔枝视频

Oct. 5, 2018

Master's student researcher passionate about helping children with stroke

Asha Hollis one of 73 U荔枝视频 students to receive Canada Graduate Scholarship Master鈥檚 awards
Adam Kirton supervises trainee Asha Hollis, who is setting up a clinical trial to analyze brain and muscle activity in children.

Adam Kirton supervises trainee Asha Hollis, who is setting up a clinical trial.

Asha Hollis takes a deep breath, lifts her violin bow into position, and strikes a chord. While she smiles at her audience, Hollis is also thinking of her muscles and her motor abilities 鈥 and the lack of them in many young children who suffer stroke at birth. Hollis wants to bring better motor skills to such children, the focus of her research at the 荔枝视频.

Stroke at birth affects one in 3,000 children in Canada, resulting in life-long disabilities. Hollis is the recent awardee of one of the 荔枝视频鈥檚 2018  

鈥淲hen I got the notification that I won the scholarship, I was both honoured and excited,鈥 says Hollis, a Cumming School of Medicine (CSM) neuroscience master鈥檚 student who is among 73 graduate students to receive the award. The CGS Master鈥檚 program provides funding to students in their early research career and provides them an opportunity to gain research experience.

鈥淩eceiving the award enables me to focus on my research and to make the project as successful as it can be,鈥 Hollis says. Under the supervision of Dr. Adam Kirton, MD, Hollis鈥檚 research project focuses on the effects of transcranial magnetic stimulation, a non-invasive form of stimulating the brain, on motor learning and neurophysiology in children. Kirton is a pediatric neurologist at the Alberta Children鈥檚 Hospital and a professor in the Department of Pediatrics in the CSM. Recently, he was honoured by the Royal Society of Canada as a newly elected fellow in the College of New Scholars and Scientists. He is also a member of the CSM鈥檚  and .

Children in the Kirton lab receive bursts of neuro stimulation which are tested against their motor skills. Hollis is setting up a clinical trial in the lab to check the activity level in parts of the brain that control particular muscles in the body after a stroke. 鈥淭he trial was a huge team effort from our lab,鈥 says Hollis. 鈥淲e did a lot of pilot testing and even collaborated with different people to design a kid鈥檚 Statstim Cap for the study.鈥

The Statstim Cap was specially designed by a rehabilitation engineer. 鈥淚t was fun to see it come together, even custom 3D printing was involved,鈥 Hollis explains. The Statstim Cap is the first of its kind and sends mild magnetic impulses to the brain while allowing kids to move around at the same time.

While studying at the university, Hollis has given back to the community. She advocates for vulnerable populations and more specifically childrens鈥 health in her spare time. She鈥檚 listed in the Alberta Council for Global Cooperation鈥檚 Top 30 under 30. Even in her spare time, Hollis is active. She鈥檚 a violinist and plays in the U荔枝视频 Orchestra and the Cumming School of Medicine Chamber Quartet. Managing all these activities, Hollis maintains her outstanding student record. Last year, Hollis achieved top marks in her graduate program. She is also part of Leaders in Medicine, a joint physician-scientist training program in the Cumming School, and will start medical school after completing her master鈥檚 degree.

鈥淚 do what I do because I want to give back to the kids that I meet who are so courageous,鈥 says Hollis, who credits her mentorship for helping hone her skills.  鈥淚 have had some of the best mentors and hope to follow in their footsteps one day to become a clinician scientist.鈥