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People who develop epilepsy after a traumatic brain injury are at an 80% higher risk of premature death compared to those who have suffered a similar brain injury without developing epilepsy.
People who develop epilepsy after a traumatic brain injury are at an 80 percent higher risk of premature death compared to those who have suffered a similar brain injury without developing epilepsy.
It's physical and emotional, but for Megan Stanislow and her service dog, Josie, it's protection and medical service for a ...
Scientists have developed a powerful new method for selectively and reversibly breaking connections between brain cells—a ...
A group of Texas-based researchers has developed an effective way to treat post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) that ...
House Bill 46 would nearly double the number of conditions eligible for the state’s Compassionate Use Program, expand the ...
A hefty expansion to the state’s narrow medical marijuana program won overwhelming approval in the Texas House on Monday, ...
Learn about retrograde amnesia, its causes, symptoms, and how it affects memory. Discover treatment options and whether lost ...
Oklahoma's governor wasn't willing to create a new crime for people who misrepresent claims about needing a service animal.
The B.C. Human Rights Tribunal has dismissed a complaint from a Costco shopper in Nanaimo who told staff during the COVID-19 ...