Neurodevelopmental Disabilities Residency Program

Research Program

The fourth year of the program is devoted to research, and research activities can be pursued during elective time in the second and third years of the program. Clinical research activities of the Division of Child Neurology include medical treatment of epilepsy, surgical treatment of epilepsy, anticonvulsant metabolism, functional neuroimaging, behavioral accompaniments of pediatric epilepsy, and demyelinating diseases of childhood. The basic research activities of the division include development of targeted virus and immunotherapy to treat cancer, establishing an animal model of demyelinating disease and mapping neuroanatomic connections in the brain using viral vectors.

A research project is required of all residents in the program. Residents are paired with mentors during the first year of the program. The mentor will assist the resident in developing a project that can be completed during the four years of the program. The project can be clinical or laboratory-based. Residents are encouraged to prepare their projects for presentation at national meetings and for publication.

The University of Pittsburgh Medical Center has an outstanding neuroscience community. Mentors and projects are available to child neurology residents at the University of Pittsburgh's Center for Neuroscience.

Top

Updated 11/2/07