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In this episode, Justin and Ryan interview Jeffrey Ratliff and hear an account of his chilling encounter with a bigfoot while hunting when he was 16 years old. We cover a lot of information and strangeness in this one. This was a super fun episode. Thanks again Jeff!Please rate and review this episode wherever you listen to podcasts.Reach out to us with your own stories, tips, advice, critiques, etc!appalachianintelligence@gmail.comFollow us on Twitter at @AiAppIntelPodSubscribe to our YouTube channel Appalachian IntelligenceSupport the show (https://www.buymeacoffee.com/AppIntel) Support the show (https://www.buymeacoffee.com/AppIntel)
Neurologist Dr. Jeffrey Ratliff offers his experience of diagnosing and treating patients with Parkinson's disease, as well as distinguishing the differences between Parkinson's and other neurological issues.
In the first segment, Dr. Teshamae Monteith talks with Dr. Paul Mathew on the prevalence of occipital neuralgia at a community hospital-based headache clinic. In the second part of the podcast, Dr. Jeffrey Ratliff talks with Drs. Lola Cook and Roy Alcalay about genetic testing for Parkinson disease.
Dr. Jeffrey Ratliff talks with Dr. Roy Alcalay about genetic testing for Parkinson's disease. Show references: https://cp.neurology.org/content/11/1/69
In the first segment, Dr. Jason Crowell speaks with Dr. Jennifer Frontera about neurology and COVID-19 in New York City. In the second part of the podcast, Dr. Jeffrey Ratliff talks with Dr. Abhimanyu Mahajan and Dr. Erica Schuyler about immigrant neurologists in the United States.
In the first segment, Dr. Jason Crowell speaks with Dr. Martha Barnette of the 'A Way with Words' podcast about language, words, and neurology. In the second part of the podcast, Dr. Jeffrey Ratliff talks with Dr. Bonnie Scott about her paper on apathy and impulse control disorders in Parkinson disease.
In the first segment, Dr. Jeffrey Ratliff talks with Dr. Yvette Sheline about her paper on the Effect of escitalopram on CSF Aβ. In the second part of the podcast, Dr. Stacey Clardy speaks with Dr. Elizabeth Finger about her article on the neural effects of oxytocin on frontotemporal dementia, also from this week’s issue. Disclosures can be found at Neurology.org. CME Opportunity: Listen to this week’s Neurology Podcast and earn 0.5 AMA PRA Category 1 CME Credits™ by completing the online Podcast quiz.
In the first segment, Dr. Jeffrey Ratliff talks with Dr. Elizabeth Matthews about her paper on super-refractory status epilepticus. In the second part of the podcast, Dr. Jason Crowell speaks with Matthew Futterman about hit New York Times article on neurologic sequela in sledding athletes. Read the NYT article here: https://nyti.ms/3mNBlhE. Disclosures can be found at Neurology.org. CME Opportunity: Listen to this week’s Neurology Podcast and earn 0.5 AMA PRA Category 1 CME Credits™ by completing the online Podcast quiz.
In the first segment, Dr. Jeffrey Ratliff speaks with Dr. A.M. Madelein van der Stouwe about her Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry article on diagnosing arm tremor. Read the article here: https://bit.ly/3iETrQD. In the second part of the podcast, Dr. Andrew Southerland talks with Dr. Michael Knoflach and Dr. Lukas Mayer about their paper discussing extracellular matrix protein in cervical artery dissection. Disclosures can be found at Neurology.org. CME Opportunity: Listen to this week’s Neurology Podcast and earn 0.5 AMA PRA Category 1 CME Credits™ by completing the online Podcast quiz.
In this month's replay of past episodes, we cover movement disorder emergencies, featuring discussion between podcast editors Dr. Jeffrey Ratliff and Dr. Jason Crowell, from July 13th and 20th. For discussion questions for your next journal club talk, go here.
In the first segment, Dr. Jason Crowell talks with Eric Pachman about his report on copaxone and drug pricing. Next, Dr. Jeffrey Ratliff talks with Dr. Yi Li about her Neurology: Clinical Practice paper discussing ultrasound-guided lumbar puncture. Disclosures can be found at Neurology.org. No CME this week: Interviews based on articles from Neurology: Clinical Practice®, Neurology® Genetics, and Neurology® Neuroimmunology & Neuroinflammation are excluded from the CME program.
In the first segment, Dr. David Lapides talks with Dr. Terence O'Brien about his paper on mortality in patients with non-epileptic seizures. Next, Dr. Jeffrey Ratliff talks with Dr. Nico Dosenbach about plasticity of functionally connected motor networks. Read Dr. Dosenbach's paper in Neuron: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0896627320303536?via%3Dihub. Disclosures can be found at Neurology.org. CME Opportunity: Listen to this week’s Neurology Podcast and earn 0.5 AMA PRA Category 1 CME Credits™ by answering the multiple-choice questions in the online Podcast quiz.
In this replay of previous episodes, we feature discussions on Huntington's disease. There's the discussion between Dr. Jeffrey Ratliff and Dr. Ruth Walker from November 2016. Then, we have 2 Neurology Minute episodes on the history of HD. The next segment features Dr. Jason Crowell talking with Dr. Nancy Wexler from May 2020, on her life's work in HD research and on her life. From July 2019, Dr. Jeffrey Ratliff talks with Dr. Sarah Tabrizi on targeting HD expression in patients. Finally, in July 2020, Dr. Jason
In the first segment, Dr. Kathryn Nevel and Dr. Jennie Taylor discuss neuro-oncology. Next, Dr. Jeffrey Ratliff talks with Dr. David Charles about his paper discussing deep brain stimulation in early Parkinson disease. Disclosures can be found at Neurology.org. CME Opportunity: Listen to this week’s Neurology Podcast and earn 0.5 AMA PRA Category 1 CME Credits™ by answering the multiple-choice questions in the online Podcast quiz.
In the first part of the podcast, Dr. Jeffrey Ratliff and Dr. Jason Crowell continue their discussion on movement disorder emergencies in the 2nd part of a 2-part dialogue. In the second segment, Dr. Stacey Clardy talks with Dr. Holly Hinson about her Neurology: Clinical Practice editorial on patient and public involvement in clinical trials from the June 2020 issue. Disclosures can be found at Neurology.org. No CME this week: Interviews based on articles from Neurology: Clinical Practice®, Neurology® Genetics, and Neurology® Neuroimmunology & Neuroinflammation are excluded from the CME program.
In the first segment, you’ll hear the first part of a 2-part conversation between Dr. Jeffrey Ratliff and Dr. Jason Crowell on movement disorder emergencies. In the second segment, Dr. Stacey Clardy talks with Dr. John Chen about his Neurology paper discussing maintenance therapy for MOG-IgG disorder. Disclosures can be found at Neurology.org. CME Opportunity: Listen to this week’s Neurology Podcast and earn 0.5 AMA PRA Category 1 CME Credits™ by answering the multiple-choice questions in the online Podcast quiz.
In the first segment, Dr. Jason Crowell talks with Dr. Daniel Claassen about his Neurology: Genetics paper on genotyping single nucleotide polymorphisms for allele-selective therapy in Huntington disease. In the second part of the podcast, Dr. Jeffrey Ratliff focuses his discussion with Dr. Roseanne Dobkin on telephone-based CBT for depression in patients with Parkinson disease. Disclosures can be found at Neurology.org. No CME this week: Interviews based on articles from Neurology: Clinical Practice®, Neurology® Genetics, and Neurology® Neuroimmunology & Neuroinflammation are excluded from the CME program.
In the first segment, Dr. David Lapides talks with Dr. Tarunya Arun about her paper discussing diagnosis of neurosarcoidosis. In the second part of the podcast, Dr. Jeffrey Ratliff talks with Dr. Jeffrey Schweitzer about his NEJM paper discussing progenitor cells for Parkinson disease. Read the NEJM article here: https://bit.ly/2XjHvuc. Disclosures can be found at Neurology.org. CME Opportunity: Listen to this week’s Neurology Podcast and earn 0.5 AMA PRA Category 1 CME Credits™ by answering the multiple-choice questions in the online Podcast quiz.
In the first segment, Dr. Jeffrey Ratliff talks with Dr. Yves Dauvilliers about their paper on insomnia treatment in the elderly. In the second part of the podcast, Dr. Jason Crowell continues his talk with Dr. Nancy Wexler about living with Huntington's disease. Disclosures can be found at Neurology.org. CME Opportunity: Listen to this week’s Neurology Podcast and earn 0.5 AMA PRA Category 1 CME Credits™ by answering the multiple-choice questions in the online Podcast quiz.
In the first segment, Dr. Jeffrey Ratliff talks with Dr. Charles Bernick about his paper on longitudinal change in regional brain volumes with exposure to repetitive head impacts. In the second part of the podcast, Dr. Teshamae Monteith talks with Dr. Amy Gelfand about infant colic and episodic syndromes. Disclosures can be found at Neurology.org. CME Opportunity: Listen to this week’s Neurology Podcast and earn 0.5 AMA PRA Category 1 CME Credits™ by answering the multiple-choice questions in the online Podcast quiz.
In the first segment, Dr. David Lapides talks with Dr. Allan Ropper about NEJM paper on neurosyphilis, which you can read here: https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMx190030. In the second segment, Dr. Jeffrey Ratliff talks with Dr. Christopher Tarolli about his Neurology: Clinical Practice paper on symptom burden among individuals with Parkinson disease. In the second part of the podcast.
In the first segment, Dr. Jeffrey Ratliff talks with Dr. Ylva Hiorth and about their paper on a 7-year prospective population-based study on orthostatic hypotension in Parkinson disease. In the second part of the podcast, Dr. Jason Crowell talks with Nobel Prize winner Dr. Stanley B. Prusiner in the first part of a two-part interview. Disclosures can be found at Neurology.org. CME Opportunity: Listen to this week’s Neurology Podcast and earn 0.5 AMA PRA Category 1 CME Credits™ by answering the multiple-choice questions in the online Podcast quiz.
In the first segment, Dr. Stacey Clardy talks with Dr. Robert Zivadinov about cumulative gadodiamide administration leading to brain gadolinium deposition in early MS. In the second part of the podcast, Dr. Jeffrey Ratliff focuses his discussion with Dr. Michael D. Fox on his Brain paper on network localization of cervical dystonia based on causal brain lesions. You can read the paper here: https://academic.oup.com/brain/article-abstract/142/6/1660/5491101?redirectedFrom=fulltext.
In the first segment, Dr. Gregory Day talks with Dr. Philip Insel about his paper on determining clinically meaningful decline in preclinical Alzheimer disease. In the second part of the podcast, Dr. Sarah Tabrizi talks about targeting Huntington expression in patients with Huntington's disease in her interview with Dr. Jeffrey Ratliff. Read Dr. Tabrizi's paper in NEJM: https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa1900907?query=recirc_curatedRelated_article.
Dr. Jeffrey Ratliff discusses neurology residency programs, training, and action by the consortium of residency program directors.
In the first segment, Dr. Jeffrey Ratliff talks with Dr. Franziska Hopfner about her paper on the use of ß2-adrenoreceptor agonist and antagonist drugs and risk of Parkinson disease. In the second part of the podcast, Dr. Jason Crowell focuses his discussion with Dr. Jerzy Szaflarski on his JAMA Neurology paper on the US Food and Drug Administration’s authorization of the first cannabis-derived pharmaceutical. You can read the paper here: https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamaneurology/article-abstract/2714720.
In the first segment, Dr. Jason Crowell talks with Dr. Brian Callaghan about rising out-of-pocket costs for commonly prescribed neurologic medications. In the second part of the podcast, Dr. Jeffrey Ratliff focuses his interview with Dr. Stefan Pulst on ataxias. CME Opportunity: Listen to this week’s Neurology Podcast and earn 0.5 AMA PRA Category 1 CME Credits™ by answering the multiple-choice questions in the online Podcast quiz.
This month’s Delayed Recall highlights episodes on developments and scandals related to genetic testing and technology in neurology. Dr. Jason Crowell and Dr. Josephine Johnston of the Hastings Center start the show discussing the ethical and philosophical implications of gene editing., which first aired on December 18th, 2018. The next segment, also from December 18th, has Dr. Stacey Clardy and Dr. Stefan Pulst focusing on the scientific and societal impact of the recent first reported gene editing using the CRISPR technology. Following this segment is one from December 3rd and finds Dr. Jeff Waugh talking with Dr. Saadet Andrews about her paper on the genetic landscape of pediatric movement disorders and management implications. This episode continues with an interview on a Neurology: Genetics on the long journey to diagnosis for patients with mitochondrial disease between Dr. Jason Crowell and Drs. John L.P. Thompson and Michio Hirano from April 3rd, 2018. The episode wraps up with a talk between Dr. Jeffrey Ratliff and Dr. Thomas Bird from March 20th, 2018, on Dr. Bird’s Neurology: Clinical Practice paper on the benefits and limitations of exome sequencing to identify hereditary ataxias.
In the first segment, Dr. Jeffrey Ratliff talks with Dr. Tamara Milka Pringsheim about her practice guideline recommendations summary paper on the treatment of tics in people with Tourette syndrome and chronic tic disorders. In the What's Trending segment, you'll hear the second part of an interview between Dr. Jason Crowell and New York Times staff writer Pam Belluck on CRISPR and gene editing.
Dr. Jeffrey Ratliff talks with Dr. Anneleen Berende about her paper on the effect of prolonged antibiotic treatment on cognitive performance in patients with Lyme borreliosis. Dr. Andrew Southerland focuses his interview with Dr. Stephen Klasko on hospitals of the future, following a panel at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. The article can be found here: https://www.statnews.com/2019/01/26/dispatch-from-davos-future-hospitals/.
Listen now: Integrative and holistic medicineDr. Jeffrey Ratliff, internal medicine physician atBristol Regional Medical Center