Newly diagnosed
Guides for the first weeks: building your care team, what to ask, and how to think about telling family.
CADASIL touches generations — patients, partners, parents, and children. We exist to make sure no one has to figure it out by themselves.

A new CADASIL diagnosis is a lot to absorb. Take it slowly. The first weeks matter less than the first year.
Guides for the first weeks: building your care team, what to ask, and how to think about telling family.
Predictive testing decision support, genetic counselling resources, and the science of "to test or not to test."
Information on inheritance, reproductive options, prenatal and preimplantation genetic testing, and how to find counsellors.
Support for the people who walk this path with someone else — practical, emotional, and logistical.
Age-appropriate explanations, school accommodations, and how to talk to young people about a family diagnosis.
Care planning, advance directives, palliative-care principles, and supporting quality of life.
Partners, parents, adult children, and friends who provide care for someone with CADASIL deserve support too. Caregiver health is patient health.
Identify two or three people you can call when things are hard. Distribute the load early — before crisis points.
Sleep. Movement. Friends. Therapy if you can access it. Caregiver burnout is real and predictable.
Power of attorney, advance directives, financial arrangements. Easier when made early.
The hardest part wasn't the diagnosis itself — it was realizing how many of my mother's struggles, dismissed for years, suddenly had a name. The community helped me put the pieces back together.
— A CADASIL family member