Stanley S. Stylli is a Neurologist based at 300 Grattan St, Parkville, VIC 3050, Australia. If you’re dealing with symptoms that come from the brain or nervous system, neurology can help make sense of what’s going on and what to do next.
In day-to-day care, Stanley looks after people with a range of serious neurological conditions. This can include brain tumours and related problems, such as astrocytoma, glioblastoma, glioma, gliomatosis cerebri, and pituitary tumours. At times, patients are also seen for issues like subarachnoid haemorrhage, and other conditions that affect how the brain and nearby structures work. There can also be hormone-related effects, for example when tumours involve the hypothalamus.
For some people, the hardest part is not just the diagnosis, but the knock-on effects. Brain conditions can change sleep, mood, memory, strength, balance, and day-to-day functioning. In many cases, treatment plans need careful coordination because symptoms can shift over time. Stanley’s role is to assess the nervous system, talk through likely causes, and help guide the next steps with the wider healthcare team.
Clinical experience matters with neurology, and Stanley brings that steady, practical approach that helps people feel less lost during a stressful time. Ongoing learning also plays a part, especially when managing complex brain tumour cases where imaging and treatment decisions can be time-sensitive.
When it comes to education, Stanley has training in neurology through the medical pathway that leads to working as a specialist neurologist. That base matters for the way neurological symptoms are assessed and interpreted, from the first appointment through follow-up. The focus stays on clear explanations and sensible next steps, without making things sound more complicated than they need to be.
There’s also a wider world of medical research around brain tumours and brain bleeding conditions. While specific research involvement or clinical trials aren’t listed here, staying up to date with new care ideas is often part of good specialist practice. If clinical trials are relevant to a person’s situation, they can be discussed through the care team at the right time.