MoyaMoya diease

Moyamoya disease (MMD) is the condition at the heart of ANNI's founding story. It is a rare cerebrovascular disorder characterised by progressive occlusion of the internal carotid arteries and the development of abnormal collateral vessels at the base of the brain. While it is most studied in East Asia, its presence in African populations is almost certainly under-documented.

Section 9.5 · The Evidence

Statistics on Moyamoya disease.

IndicatorStatisticSource
Cognitive impairment in MMD patients (meta-analysis, 17 studies)54.59%Toh et al., JAD 2024
Most common cognitive deficit in MMDExecutive dysfunctionToh et al., 2024; Frontiers Hum Neurosci 2024
High misdiagnosis rate reported inEurope (likely higher in Africa)European MMD White Paper, 2023
MMD-associated epilepsy risk factorsHigh mRS, early seizures, atrophyPredictive Factors for Epilepsy in MMD, PubMed
MMD research concentrationEast Asia (Africa underrepresented)MedComm Review, 2025
Genetic markers identified for MMDRNF213, ACTA2, DIAPH1, HLAHe et al., MedComm 2025

Expert Analysis

What the evidence tells us.

A comprehensive 2025 review of advances in Moyamoya disease notes that most epidemiological research has been conducted in East Asia, with very little data from African populations. This gap is critical: the clinical presentation, genetic profile, and available treatment options may differ substantially for African patients, and the extreme scarcity of neuroimaging and specialist care means MMD in Africa is almost certainly underdiagnosed and misdiagnosed.

— He et al., MedComm, 2025

The first European guidelines for Moyamoya disease, published in 2023, acknowledge that a high misdiagnosis rate has been observed in Europe. If misdiagnosis is common in well-resourced European health systems, the rate in African settings — where MRI access is limited, neurologists are scarce, and awareness is near-zero — is likely far higher.

— European MMD Guidelines, 2023; European MMD White Paper, 2023

ANNI's Unique Position

Why ANNI is uniquely positioned on Moyamoya disease.

One of Few African-Led Voices on MMD

ANNI is one of the very few African-led organisations explicitly addressing Moyamoya disease in research and awareness.

Lived Expertise from the Founder

As a Moyamoya survivor, the Founder brings lived experience and credibility to a condition largely invisible in African neurology discourse.

African MMD Patient Registry

ANNI is developing a Moyamoya patient registry to document African cases and support future research collaboration.

“The condition that nearly ended a PhD journey is now the condition driving a continental mission for visibility and care.”