Hello from Boston! Dr. Anton Titov, MD. We're with Dr. Tracey Milligan. She is Assistant Professor of Neurology at Harvard Medical School and Vice Chair for Education in the BWH Department of Neurology. Dr. Milligan obtained her MD from Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York. Dr. Tracey Milligan, MD, did her residency in neurology at Brigham and Women's Hospital and Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, and completed fellowship in epilepsy at Brigham and Women's Hospital. Dr. Milligan's clinical and research interests are in the advanced treatment of epilepsy and epileptic seizure disorders. Dr. Tracey Milligan, MD, has published dozens of articles in international peer-reviewed scientific journals and was invited to give many talks at international conferences on neurology and epileptic seizure disorder treatment. Dr. Anton Titov, MD. Hello and welcome! Thank you! Epilepsy, or epileptic seizure disorder, is a relatively common medical problem. What are the main causes of the new onset epileptic seizures, and maybe they will be different by certain age groups. Seizures [epilepsy] are frequently misdiagnosed: one study found that 25% to 40% of adults did not have epilepsy even though they had that diagnosis and were treated for seizures. Dr. Milligan devotes her clinical and research career to diagnosis of complex and difficult-to-diagnose seizures. She educates public on all aspects of epilepsy. It includes work against frequent prejudice and discrimination of people with epilepsy.
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