Brett W. Stringer is a Neurologist based on Sturt Rd in Bedford Park, SA 5042. He looks after patients who need help with brain and nerve health, and he also supports families when the situation is serious and stressful.
In his neurology work, Brett focuses a lot on brain tumours and related conditions. This can include astrocytoma, glioblastoma, and other gliomas. At times, he also deals with more spread-out brain involvement, like gliomatosis cerebri. He understands that these diagnoses can bring a lot of questions, so the goal is to keep things clear, calm, and practical as care moves along.
Brett also works with people who have sudden or hard-to-explain changes in health. One of the conditions listed for his clinical work is sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS). This is a topic that needs care and support, not fear or confusion, and Brett’s approach is to treat the family seriously and be there through the medical steps.
Some patients Brett sees have rare developmental brain conditions too. For example, he lists VLDLR-associated cerebellar hypoplasia, which can affect how the cerebellum develops and how a child’s coordination and movement may look over time. In many cases, care for these conditions means working with the wider healthcare team, and helping families understand what to expect next.
Neurology appointments can feel rushed at times, especially when people are already dealing with results, symptoms, and hospital visits. Brett’s role is to make sense of the picture in a down-to-earth way. He helps patients and families talk through symptoms, treatment pathways, and what matters most for day-to-day life.
Over time, he has built his clinical practice around these kinds of brain-related conditions. The focus stays on patient care first, with careful attention to the details that can affect outcomes and comfort.
As for research and teaching, there isn’t any extra information provided here about publications or research work. Also, no specific clinical trials are listed for this profile. What is clear is that Brett’s work covers major brain tumour diagnoses, as well as other rare brain conditions, and he helps people move forward with support and clear next steps.