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Clinical Training
As a fellow, you will see patients in the Behavioral Neurology Clinic
on a regular basis. You will attend neuropathology sessions under
the supervision of Dennis Dickson, M.D., twice per week. The program,
is flexible to allow you to train in speech pathology, neuroimaging
and psychiatry.
You will see patients with a variety of symptoms in the setting
of common and uncommon neurobehavioral disorders.
You will develop proficiency in the following areas:
- Administer a mental status examination and interpreting
the results.
- Expand evaluations in areas such as attention/concentration,
language, praxis, visuospatial functioning and reasoning/problem
solving.
- Discuss the indications for and interpretation
of neuropsychological testing.
- Relate neurobehavioral deficits to anatomical
areas.
- Discuss the diagnostic approach to evaluating
patients with acute encephalopathy/delirium, subacute encephalopathy,
chronic progressive encephalopathy/dementia and distinct neurobehavioral
syndromes (e.g., transient global amnesia, limbic encephalitis).
- Discuss the epidemiology, genetics, molecular
biology/pathophysiology, clinical features, radiologic features,
and pathologic hallmarks of the degenerative and prion dementias.
You will also develop proficiency in evaluating and managing patients
with a variety of conditions such as:
- Degenerative Disorders/Dementia - Mild
Cognitive Impairment (MCI)
- Alzheimer's Disease (AD)
- Parkinson's Disease with Dementia (PD+Dem)
- Lewy Body Dementia/Lewy Body Disease /Dementia with
Lewy Bodies (DLB)
- Frontotemporal Dementia (FTD)/Pick's Disease
- Primary Progressive Aphasia (PPA)
- Corticobasal Degeneration (CBD)
- Progressive Supranuclear Palsy (PSP)
- Posterior Cortical Atrophy (PCA)/Progressive Cortical
Visual Dysfunction Syndrome (PCVDS)
- Huntington's Disease (HD)
- Vascular Dementia - Dementia with cerebrovascular
disease (DCVD)/Vascular Dementia (VaD)
- Binswanger's Disease
- Cerebral Autosomal Dominant Arteriopathy with Subcortical
Infarcts and Leukoencephalopathy (CADASIL)
- Prion Disorders - Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease
(CJD)
- Gerstmann-Straussler-Scheinker Syndrome (GSS)
- Normal Pressure Hydrocephalus (NPH)
- Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI)
- Autoimmune/Inflammatory Encephalopathies
- Encephalopathy associated with Hashimoto's Thyroiditis
("Hashimoto's Encephalopathy")
- Sjogren's Associated Encephalopathy
- Nonvasculitic Autoimmune Inflammatory Meningoencephalopathy
(NAIM)
- Cognitive Impairment/Behavioral Changes
associated with brain tumors, infarcts, Meningitis/Encephalitis,
and sleep disorders
Didactic Training
Didactic training is an integral part of Mayo Clinic's Behavioral
Neurology Fellowship Program. You will participate in:
- Neurology Grand Rounds (each Monday)
- Inpatient Neurology/Neurosurgery Grand Rounds
(each Wednesday)
- Subspecialty Conference (Behavioral Neurology
presents every sixth week)
- Behavioral Neurology Course: A superb multidisciplinary
Behavioral Neurology Course takes place one afternoon
per week from November to March every other year.
All lectures are captured on video, which can be viewed at any
time throughout the training program.
Research Training
The Neurology staff participates in research programs, most of which
are funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH). You will
see many research patients with unique and often complex neurobehavioral
disorders, as well as those who are "aging successfully."
You will be encouraged to participate in clinical trials, protocol
development, grant writing and other research-related activities.
Mayo Clinic in Jacksonville has a large and internationally known
neuroscience faculty and you will have the opportunity to work with
them on different projects. Numerous presentations at national and
international conferences have been developed from this exposure,
and all previous fellows have been successful in publishing manuscripts
in peer-reviewed journals, as well as abstracts and book chapters.
Teaching Opportunities
You will have the opportunity to participate in the Neurology Residency
core lectures and Behavioral Neurology Conference, as well as provide
instruction to medical students and residents rotating in behavioral
neurology. Our fellows have developed several teaching files and
educational presentations, which are available to all trainees.
Evaluation
To ensure acquisition of adequate knowledge and development of appropriate
technical skills, your performance is monitored carefully during
the course of your behavioral neurology training at Mayo Clinic.
Formal evaluation by supervising faculty members occurs quarterly.
Each trainee is assigned a faculty adviser for the purpose of providing
feedback.
In addition, you regularly will evaluate rotations and faculty
to ensure education needs are met and to provide feedback to the
faculty to guide their efforts to improve the program.
Career Development
You will meet periodically with your faculty adviser and the training
program director to discuss individual goals. Mayo Clinic recruits
many of its staff physicians from its own training programs. Thus,
after completion of the Behavioral Neurology Fellowship, career
opportunities may be available at one of Mayo Clinic's practice
sites.
Off-site Rotations
You may elect to rotate to Mayo Clinic in Rochester or Mayo Clinic
in Scottsdale during this fellowship. At either location you can
participate in clinical research studies and interact with the basic
researchers in many areas including neuropathology, neurogenetics,
amyloid metabolism and neurotransmitters.
Mayo Clinic funds the authorized additional costs of travel, housing,
automobile rental and licensure fees.
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