Childhood Epilepsy that Lasts into Adulthood Triples Mortality
Publication Date:
Wed, 12/22/2010
David Ficker, MD, Associate Director of the UC Epilepsy Center, is featured in a report about a new research finding that epilepsy that strikes in childhood and lingers into adulthood triples an individual’s risk of dying. Researchers also report that children who “outgrow” epilepsy and see their seizures fade as adults do not have this added mortality risk. Click on URL below for complete story.
Rick’s strategy for managing his epilepsy wasn’t perfect, but it had worked well enough for most of his career as a theme park project manager who traveled the world. Whether he worked in Australia, Malaysia, Singapore or Germany, his routine was always the same. After arriving in a new city, he would find a local doctor, schedule a CT scan of his brain, show the doctor his previous scans, get a new prescription, and inform his co-workers that he had epilepsy. He wanted people to understand that, “If I do something weird, you’ll know what it is.”