Save the date for our 7th Annual Great Lakes Regional Headache Society Meeting!
This year it’s happening Saturday, October 17th, 2026 at the Sheraton Pittsburgh Station Square.
Join us for the best headache education in the region!
We’d love to see you in person, but there’s a virtual live stream option too!
More details to come. See you there!
#MedEd #Migraine #Headache
#FacialPain #Neurology
@Kamalasia93@Estcheng@AMoosaMD It’s definitely available there. We’ve had a number of doctors living there using the book’s prior editions and sending us notes of how helpful it was, including one of our prior colleagues who is a neurologist there. She said many of their residents there also use the book.
MRIs can be normal without evidence of low pressure or high pressure. Some people can also fluctuate between high pressure (IIH) and low pressure (leak forms when pressure gets high enough, then seals and pressure builds again). This shows a partial empty sella (on this view) which can be normal anatomical variation, but can also reflect IIH in the right setting (depending on other symptoms). Positional headaches (worse standing, better lying down) are also not characteristic just for CSF leaks. There can be many other causes of that pattern too.
@elonmusk@elonmusk I'm curious if you've tried creating solar powered absorption surfaces for any of the Tesla vehicles to help charge the battery continuously through the daylight hours, thus limiting the need to find charging stations? Always wondered that...
Thanks! Basically the following differences:
-5-10 additional Q+A’s per chapter
-Additional images in many chapters
-About 175 more pages than 2nd edition
-All Q+A’s updated/revised where appropriate including new/updated guidelines, newest therapies, etc.
-All color images now incorporated into the questions rather than having to look back at separate color plates
-1 illustration correction from prior editions
-I believe the e-book is supposed to be easier to jump around and more user friendly too