- Orrin Devinsky
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Orrin Devinsky, M.D. (born February 12, 1957) is the Director of the NYU Comprehensive Epilepsy Center and the Saint Barnabus Institute of Neurology and Neurosurgery (INN). He is also a Professor of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry at NYU Langone School of Medicine. Devinsky specializes in epilepsy and behavioral neurology.
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Education and Academic Career
Devinsky was mentored by Norman Geschwind, who stimulated his interest in both epilepsy and behavioral neurology.
He received his B.S. and M.S. from Yale University (1977) and his M.D. from Harvard Medical School (1982). He interned at Boston's Beth Israel Hospital, completed neurology training at the New York Hospital-Cornell Medical Center, and his epilepsy fellowship at the National Institutes of Health (NIH).
Devinsky arrived at Saint Barnabas Medical Center in 1998. In 2009, Saint Barnabas’ Neurology and Neurosurgery Program became the first in New Jersey to make US News & World Reports top 50 in the nation list.
Devinsky directs The Comprehensive Epilepsy Center (CEC) at New York University Langone Medical Center. The CEC has 16 inpatient video-EEG-monitored beds in a specialized Epilepsy Monitoring Unit. Each bed has the capacity for 64 channels of EEG data with on-line computer analysis for 24-hour seizure and spike detection.
He has chaired several committees of the American Epilepsy Society and has served as a Board member. He is active in the American Academy of Neurology and the Epilepsy Foundation. He is an associate editor of Epilepsy and Behavior and co-founded Reviews in Neurological Disorders, and serves as a reviewer for more than 30 journals.
Devinsky founded Finding A Cure for Epilepsy and Seizures (FACES) and co-founded epilepsy.com. He co-founded the Epilepsy Therapy Project, where he serves as the Vice President for Translational programs.
Devinsky has appeared on many television news programs, including Nightly News, Today Show, and Good Morning America, and he has been featured several times on Mystery Diagnosis. He was invited to the White House to ask President Obama a question about Health Care.[1]
Research
Devinsky's epilepsy research interests include translational therapies, sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP), devices to deliver drugs directly to the brain, quality of life, cognitive and behavioral issues in epilepsy, surgical therapy, and new medications. Other areas of active interest include autism, tuberous sclerosis, and head trauma.
Devinsky serves as the director of the Phenome Core for the Epilepsy Phenome/Genome Project, funded by an NIH multi-institutional grant. Devinsky and his co-investigators are conducting studies of several investigational antiepileptic medications such as topiramate, tiagabine, lamotrigine, vigabatrin, oxcarbazepine, and remacemide, as well as vagal nerve stimulator implantation. He is also collaborating with other researchers to develop a device to deliver antiepileptic drugs directly to the brain to treat seizures.
He was involved in pivotal drug studies for felbamate, oxcarbazepine, intravenous valproate and other drugs. He was the lead investigator of the Quality of Life in Epilepsy group that developed the four inventories that were translated into many languages and used in over 150 academic studies.[2]
Publications
Articles
Devinsky has published more than 350 articles and book chapters.
Books
Devinsky has authored more than 20 books and monographs.
References
External links
Lectures
- FACES 2008 Epilepsy Conference
- Orrin Devinsky, Part I: Limbic Lessons from Epilepsy - Neuropsychoanalysis Lecture Series
- Orrin Devinsky, Part 2: Limbic Lessons from Epilepsy - Neuropsychoanalysis Lecture Series
Websites
Categories:- 1957 births
- Living people
- American neurologists
- Epilepsy
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