Daniel B Lowenstein, MD, Abpn

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21 W 86th St
New York, NY 10024
Dr. Daniel Lowenstein is an assistant professor of neurology at CUIMC, in the Division of Child Neurology. Dr. Lowenstein completed his medical doctorate at Tel Aviv Universitys Sackler School of Medicine in Israel, followed by residency training at Childrens Hospital of Pittsburgh of UPMC, and fellowship training in epilepsy at The Johns Hopkins Hospital. He is board certified in Neurology with Special Qualifications in Child Neurology. Dr. Lowenstein sees outpatient pediatric neurology patients, with a focus on pediatric epilepsy, and is also an attending in the pediatric epilepsy monitoring unit at NewYork-Presbyterian Morgan Stanley Children's Hospital. Boards and other certifications:ABPN Epilepsy
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Jennifer Gelinas, MD, PHD

Jennifer Gelinas, MD, PhD is an assistant professor of neurology (in the Institute for Genomic Medicine and the Gertrude H. Sergievsky Center) at Columbia University Irving Medical Center. Dr. Gelinas obtained her medical doctorate and doctorate degrees at the University of Alberta, Canada. She subsequently completed pediatric neurology residency at the University of British Columbia, followed by an epilepsy fellowship at New York University Langone Medical Center. Dr. Gelinas' clinical practice focuses on infantile and childhood epilepsy, with a special interest in epilepsy surgery and intracranial electroencephalography (iEEG).In her doctoral research, Dr. Gelinas studied cellular mechanisms of learning and memory in the hippocampus. Her postdoctoral fellowship was with Dr. Gyorgy Buzsaki at New York University Langone Medical Center, investigating the effects of epileptic activity on neural networks involved in cognition, as well as advanced neural interface devices for the diagnosis and treatment of epilepsy. In her current research, Dr. Gelinas is focused on understanding how epileptic activity disrupts the proper development and function of neural networks. In vivo neurophysiology with advanced neural interface devices, behavioral memory tasks, responsive stimulation of neural networks, and neurocomputational methods are among the techniques used in her laboratory to investigate neural network dysfunction in epilepsy. The overall goal of her research is to identify novel biomarkers and systems level treatments for epileptic disorders, especially those affecting neonates and children.
United StatesNew YorkNew YorkDaniel B Lowenstein, MD, Abpn

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