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NeurologyLive will be providing live coverage of AES 2019 from Baltimore beginning Saturday, December 7.
The 73rd annual meeting of the American Epilepsy Society (AES) will kick off this week as thousands of epilepsy healthcare providers gather in Baltimore, Maryland from December 6-10, 2019.
The 5-day meeting will take place at the Baltimore Convention Center, and feature numerous sessions designed to appeal to multidisciplinary epilepsy professionals, including various symposia, special sessions, investigators workshops and special interest groups, poster sessions, and professional development.
Over 1300 abstracts have been accepted for this year’s meeting, many of which will be presented during the 3 poster sessions on Saturday, December 7, Sunday, December 8, and Monday, December 9.
The program will kick off on Friday afternoon with the 17th Judith Hoyer Lecture in Epilepsy, which will focus on advances in the diagnosis and management of neonatal seizures. The lecture will be led by Eli M. Mizrahi, MD, and will also feature an update from the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS) director Walter Koroshetz, MD.
On Saturday, AES President Page B. Pennell, MD, will lead the Presidential Symposium, titled “Evidence-Based Treatment for Women With Epilepsy During Reproductive Years: 15 Years of Progress and Future Directions.” The symposium will feature presentations on the following topics:
Saturday will also feature 3 platform sessions on basic mechanisms of epilepsy, neuroimaging, and advances in neurophysiology, as well as a symposium on neurstimulation, which will be led by Lawrence J. Hirsch, MD, and Timothy Simeone, MD.
On Monday, a symposium on emergency seizure management will be led by Nicholas Abend, MD, and Adam Ostendorf, MD, and will feature actionable, data-driven changes to help optimize care of pediatric epilepsy emergencies.
The Lombroso Lecture, which will take place Monday afternoon, will be given by Karen S. Wilcox, PhD, on the topic of glial cells and epilepsy, and will be followed by a new session, titled “Dialogues to Transform Epilepsy” which will feature 2 speakers discussed how their transformative neurobiological research outside of epilepsy can be applied within the field.
Feature platform sessions on Monday include gene-targeted therapy, clinical epilepsy, and epilepsy-related comorbidities, as well as a highlight session on pediatric epilepsy and the Merrit-Putnam Symposium on neuroinflammation in epilepsy.
The Annual Meeting will wrap up on Tuesday with 2 key sessions, including the Hot Topics Symposium led by Elinor Ben-Menachem, MD, PhD, and Michael R. Sperling, MD, which will cover the latest on sudden unexpected death in epilepsy, seizure-monitoring devices, epilepsy surgery, and neuroprotection in status epilepticus. The Scientific Symposium will focus on pharmacogenomics, including existing and emerging opportunities for intervention, and will be led by Alica M. Goldman, MD, PhD.
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NeurologyLive will be providing live coverage of AES 2019. If you would like to speak to us about your research or be featured in a video interview, please reach out to Alicia Bigica (abigica@neurologylive.com).