The program's clinical facilities and fellow responsibilities include the following:
- Electrophysiology (EP) Laboratory - More than 1800 EEGs are performed at AGH each year, including inpatient and outpatient tests. The fellow is responsible for reviewing these EEGs and their interpretation, under supervision by our fellowship-trained experts James Valeriano, MD and Kevin Kelly, MD, PhD. The lab also performs 24-hour ambulatory EEGs.
- Epilepsy Monitoring Unit (EMU) - The fellow will gain experience in the placement of sphenoidal electrodes and interpreting video-EEGs used to assess candidates for epilepsy surgery. The fellow will round on patients in the EMU on a daily basis, reviewing video-EEG records, and will participate in the epilepsy case conference in which surgical candidates are discussed.
- Epilepsy Clinic - The fellow will attend epilepsy clinic to gain clinical experience in managing patients with epilepsy. Patients seen in the clinic include those who are postoperative epilepsy surgery; those on various medical regimens, including those in drug studies; and patients with vagus nerve stimulators.
- Electromyography (EMG)/Nerve Conduction Velocity (NCV) Laboratory - More than 1300 EMG/NCV studies are performed yearly in this lab under the direction of George Small, MD, and Sandeep Rana, MD. The fellow will progress rapidly to design, perform, and interpret these studies.
- ALS, Neuromuscular, and Botox clinics - AGH has a large population of patients with motor neuron disease, myasthenia gravis, or peripheral neuropathy, and Dr. Rana's amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) clinic is the region's largest. The fellow's experience is also strengthened by Dr. Small and Dr. Rana's participation in the Neuropathy Association, the nation's largest resource regarding this condition.
- Autonomic Neurophysiology Laboratory - This lab, opened in 2005, allows the fellow additional experience in diagnosing cardioadrenergic, cardiovagal, and small-fiber pathology using tilt-table testing results, the R-R interval, Valsalva testing, and QSART testing results from patients with unexplained syncope or idiopathic peripheral neuropathy.
Sample Block Schedule