Epilepsy Specialist Taylorsville NC

Epilepsy is a neurological condition that causes seizures—sudden surges of electrical activity in the brain affecting how a person feels or acts. Seizures can relate to a brain injury or family history, but in a majority of cases, the cause is unknown. Read on for more information on seizure.

Pamela J Russell Howard, MD
Taylorsville, NC
Specialties
Neurology
Gender
Female
Education
Medical School: U Of Tx Med Sch At Houston, Houston Tx 77225
Graduation Year: 1992

Data Provided by:
Allen Orlin Smith, MD
(828) 327-9687
415 N Center St Ste 202
Hickory, NC
Specialties
Neurology
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: Univ Of Il Coll Of Med, Chicago Il 60680
Graduation Year: 1969
Hospital
Hospital: Frye Reg Med Ctr, Hickory, Nc; Grace Hospital, Morganton, Nc
Group Practice: Allen O Smith Neurology

Data Provided by:
Larry Wayne Boyles
(828) 327-9869
415 N Center St
Hickory, NC
Specialty
Neurology

Data Provided by:
Donald Schmechel
(828) 396-7550
4355 Hickory Blvd
Granite Falls, NC
Specialty
Neurology

Data Provided by:
Robert Yapundich, MD
(828) 328-5500
1985 Tate Blvd SE Ste 600
Hickory, NC
Specialties
Neurology
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: Wv Univ Sch Of Med, Morgantown Wv 26506
Graduation Year: 1991

Data Provided by:
Larry Wayne Boyles, MD
(828) 327-9869
415 N Center St Ste 202
Hickory, NC
Specialties
Neurology, Internal Medicine
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: Univ Of Nc At Chapel Hill Sch Of Med, Chapel Hill Nc 27599
Graduation Year: 1970
Hospital
Hospital: Frye Reg Med Ctr, Hickory, Nc
Group Practice: Boyles & Smith Neurology

Data Provided by:
James Anthony Armstrong
(828) 327-9869
415 N Center St
Hickory, NC
Specialty
Neurology

Data Provided by:
Allen Orlin Smith
(828) 327-9869
415 N Center St
Hickory, NC
Specialty
Neurology

Data Provided by:
Rudy Santoso, MD
(828) 324-4143
1019 Lenoir Rhyne Blvd SE
Hickory, NC
Specialties
Psychiatry, Neurology
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: Univ Padjadjaran, Fac Of Med, Bandung, Jawa Barat, Indonesia
Graduation Year: 1971
Hospital
Hospital: Catawba Mem Hosp, Hickory, Nc
Group Practice: Mental Health Svc-Catawba Cnty

Data Provided by:
James Clayton Davie, MD
(205) 933-2106
1818 Davie Ave
Statesville, NC
Specialties
Neurological Surgery
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: Univ Of Al Sch Of Med, Birmingham Al 35294
Graduation Year: 1960

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Epilepsy

Provided by: 

By Kelli Rosen

Matthew Robinson, of Denver was just 20 months old when he had his first seizure. “He fell on the floor and shook for about three or four minutes,” his dad, Doug, recalls. “And then two weeks later he did it again.” A local neurologist scheduled an EEG (electroencephalogram); it revealed irregular activity in the brain of this otherwise healthy toddler, who, turns out, had suffered grand mal seizures. The frightening reality stunned Robinson and his wife Diane: Their son had epilepsy.

Epilepsy is a neurological condition that causes seizures—sudden surges of electrical activity in the brain affecting how a person feels or acts. Seizures can relate to a brain injury or family history, but in a majority of cases, the cause is unknown. In the US, 2.7 million people have been treated with epilepsy in the past five years. Children, especially those in their first year of life, make up most of the new cases, but epilepsy can develop at any age.

The standard method of treatment—anti-seizure medications—come with side effects, including fatigue, abdominal discomfort, dizziness, blurred vision, rashes, and bone loss, and unfortunately, these conventional drugs don’t always work. Matthew’s medications actually exacerbated his seizures—from one or two a day to a staggering 100 a day.

Unfortunately, Matthew’s experience isn’t out of the norm. “One-third of those with epilepsy in the US, that’s around a million people, do not respond to treatment with any of the existing therapies,” says Warren Lammert, the Boston-based chairman and co-founder of the Epilepsy Therapy Development Project (ETDP), which seeks to advance new treatments for people living with epilepsy. Luckily, the following seven natural strategies—which including dietary and lifestyle changes—hold promise for those who don’t respond to conventional drugs.

Fatten up

The ketogenic diet is the most ubiquitous of all epilepsy nutritional therapies. So much so, in fact, that Eric H.W. Kossoff, MD, associate director of the Pediatric Neurology Residency Program and assistant professor of Pediatrics and Neurology at Johns Hopkins in Baltimore, Maryland, considers it mainstream. “The diet was exclusively developed for epilepsy back in the 1920s when doctors learned fasting improved seizures,” he says, “so they created this diet to mimic starvation.” Kossoff says that from the 1930s to the mid ’90s, drugs took over, “but now the ketogenic diet is back and very popular around the world.”

It begins with a 24-hour fasting period to cleanse the system. After that you restrict carbohydrates and instead get most of your calories from fats. People on the diet usually eat 3 to 4 grams of fat for every 1 gram of carbohydrate and protein. Nutritionists and neurologists tweak meals to induce ketosis, a state in which the body burns stored fat for fuel. Doctors don’t know why ketosis reduces seizures, but it produces positive results for lots of people. According to Kossoff, one-half to ...

Author: Kelli Rosen

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