Suncica S. Lah is a Neurologist based in Sydney, NSW. Her clinic focuses on the brain and nervous system, with care for people dealing with memory and thinking changes, seizure disorders, and injuries or illness that can affect how someone feels and functions day to day.
In many cases, patients come in with concerns like memory loss, ongoing sleep issues, or problems with attention and thinking. This can be linked to conditions such as Alzheimer’s disease, dementia, or frontotemporal dementia. At times, people also seek help for insomnia and for sleep problems like obstructive sleep apnoea, because sleep and brain health are closely linked.
Suncica also looks after people with seizure conditions. That includes epilepsy and different seizure types, such as absence seizures and generalised tonic-clonic seizures. She also treats people with partial familial epilepsy. For some patients, the goal is to get symptoms under control, and for others it’s about figuring out what’s going on when seizures are happening despite past treatment.
Head injuries and brain trauma are another big part of her work. People may present after a concussion or after a traumatic brain injury, with concerns that can include memory issues, mood changes, headaches, or other ongoing effects. Neurotoxicity syndromes are also part of the mix, which can involve brain symptoms linked to medical causes or medication effects.
Some referrals involve special situations, including patients who have had a kidney transplant. When health changes happen after transplant, the brain can sometimes be affected, so neurologic support can be important as part of overall care.
Details about experience, education, and research publications aren’t listed here. Clinical trials also aren’t specified. What is clear from her service focus is that she works with people who need careful, practical neurologic support across memory problems, seizures, and brain-related injuries or conditions.
If you’re not sure where your symptoms fit, it’s still worth booking a time to talk it through. Neurology can be confusing, and in many cases, starting with a clear assessment helps people move on to the right next steps.