Professor, Chief Physician, Postdoctoral Supervisor, PhD Supervisor at University of Science and Technology of China/Shandong University/Anhui Medical University; Medical Doctor from Sun Yat-sen University, Postdoc in Neuropharmacology, Deputy Director of Neurology and Director of the Cognitive Disorders Subspecialty at the First Affiliated Hospital (Anhui Provincial Hospital).
Education and Work Experience
- Sep 2002 – Jul 2005: PhD in Clinical Neurology, Sun Yat-sen University
- May 2007 – Present: Master’s Supervisor, Anhui Medical University
- Mar 2009 – Jun 2013: Postdoctoral Research in Clinical Neuropharmacology, Anhui Medical University
- Nov 2014 – Present: Chief Physician of Neurology, First Affiliated Hospital of USTC
- Oct 2016 – Present: Professor of Clinical Neurology, First Affiliated Hospital of USTC
- Jul 2017 – Present: PhD Supervisor, Anhui Medical University
- Nov 2017 – Present: PhD Supervisor, Shandong University
- May 2018 – Present: PhD Supervisor, University of Science and Technology of China
- Jun 2020 – Present: Postdoctoral Supervisor, University of Science and Technology of China
- Oct 2022 – Present: Member of the Anhui Provincial Health Expert Group
Academic Achievements and Impact
With over 30 years dedicated to neurology (neurology department) in medical practice, teaching, and research, focusing on cognitive disorders, neurogenetic degenerative diseases, and cerebral small vessel disease. Supervised over 40 PhD and Master’s students (including current students). Published more than 10 papers in SCI journals such as Movement Disorders, Current Neurovascular Research, and Brain Research.
Member of the Standing Committee of the Chinese Stroke Association's Cerebral Small Vessel Disease Committee and the Chinese Medical Association Anhui Neurology Branch, Deputy Leader of the Cognitive Disorders Group.
Led one National Natural Science Foundation project, one CAS Strategic Priority Research Program (Type B) subproject, and one provincial-level project.
Ongoing Projects
| Project Name | Source | Funding Indicator Number | Total Funding (10,000 RMB) | Duration |
| XDB39040400, Precision Cognitive Disorder and Neurodegenerative Disease Clinical Cohort Construction and Basic Translational Research under the ATN Framework | CAS Strategic Priority Research Program (Type B) Subproject | 375 | 2020-01 to 2024-12 |
Main Research Directions (Recruitment Specialties) and Content
Clinical Medicine
1. Neurology (Neurology Department)
- Clinical and basic research on cognitive disorders such as Alzheimer's disease
- Clinical and basic research on cerebral small vessel disease
Research involves establishing clinical research cohorts for cognitive disorders like Alzheimer's, integrating clinical and basic research to explore quantitative diagnostic systems, new pathogenic mechanisms, biomarkers, risk factors, and basic translational research.
Biology
1. Neurobiology
- Basic and clinical translational research on Alzheimer's disease
- Basic and clinical translational research on cerebral amyloid angiopathy
Research involves using disease models of Alzheimer's and cerebral amyloid angiopathy to explore their etiology, pathogenesis, and translational research from multiple angles and levels.
Representative Papers (Last Five Years)
1. Chen, Y.#, Wu, W.#, Zhao, S., Lv, X., Hu, J., Han, C., Wang, G., Wang, S., Bo, P., Zhang, J., Gui, W., Tang, Q., Liu, Q., Zhu, S. and Yu, F. Increased Accumulation of α-Synuclein in Inflamed Appendices of Parkinson's Disease Patients. Mov Disord. 2021.
2. Zhu, Y.#, Tang, Q., Wang, G., & Han, R. (2017). Tanshinone IIA Protects Hippocampal Neuronal Cells from Reactive Oxygen Species Through Changes in Autophagy and Activation of Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinase, Protein Kinase B, and Mechanistic Target of Rapamycin Pathways. Current Neurovascular Research, 14(2), 132–140.
3. Lu JP#, Wu Y, Xiao F, Li HY, Tang QQ. Bilateral medial medullary infarction with distal stenosis of hypoplastic vertebral artery. Chin Med J (Engl). 2019;132(8):998-999.
4. Xu W#, Zhou Y, Jiang Y, Zhang L, Tang QQ. Clinical and Magnetic Resonance Imaging Features of Reversible Splenial Lesion Syndrome in Adults: A Small Case Series. Eur Neurol. 2019;82(4-6):86-92.
Contact Information
E-mail: tqq1995@ustc.edu.cn; tqq1995@126.com
Phone: 13625518339