Search Results 101-110 of 21237 for seizures
ANSWER: Medication often can control epilepsy effectively and eliminate seizures. In a case like yours, where you've been seizure-free for several years, it may ...
Epilepsy is a brain disorder that causes recurring seizures. And it's common. It's estimated that 1 in 26 people develop the disorder, according to the ...
Anti-seizure drugs designed to treat epilepsy often are used to control nerve pain associated with diabetes, shingles, and other types of nerve damage.
... seizures. We hope that replacing these inhibitory cells can restore the normal excitatory balance and reduce or even eliminate seizures." The interneurons ...
It's our job as neurosurgeons to understand where that seizure starts and where it propagates," says Dr. Parker. For many people with epilepsy, seizures can be ...
For patients whose seizures are uncontrolled by medication, surgery may be their only option. The challenge is that surgeons must identify and remove the ...
... seizures (EMAS) -associated seizures. Part B of this study will be conducted to evaluate the long-term safety and tolerability of GWP42003-P in participants ...
... seizures. The unpredictable nature of seizures is severely limiting. If seizures could be reliably forecast, people with epilepsy could alter their ...
Epilepsy surgery, which is considered when at least two anti-seizure medications have failed to work, removes or alters an area of the brain where seizures ...
Mayo Clinic does not endorse companies or products. Advertising revenue supports our not-for-profit mission.
Check out these best-sellers and special offers on books and newsletters from Mayo Clinic Press.
Your gift to celebrate this day advances our doctors’ lifesaving work.