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A neurologist mid-conversation with a patient, hands open on a desk with anatomical models and a softly glowing MRI lightbox in the background
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Board-Certified Neurologists

Your Brain, Explained
by the People Who Study It

Whether you're clutching a new prescription, researching a loved one's symptoms, or trying to make sense of a diagnosis — our neurologists speak your language.

Jump to your condition

Neurologists from
Yale MedicineJohns HopkinsUCSFCleveland ClinicMayo Clinic
Our Specialists

Meet the neurologists who will be speaking with you

Each short video is a fifteen-second introduction — so you already know who you're talking to before the appointment begins.

Dr. Sarah Chen introduction video thumbnail
0:15
Portrait of Dr. Sarah Chen, Headache & Migraine Specialist

Dr. Sarah Chen

Headache & Migraine Specialist

MD, FAHS · Yale School of Medicine

Headache Medicine
"Migraine is one of the most underdiagnosed conditions I see. The moment a patient understands it's neurological — not 'just a headache' — everything shifts."
Dr. Marcus Okafor introduction video thumbnail
0:15
Portrait of Dr. Marcus Okafor, Movement Disorders Neurologist

Dr. Marcus Okafor

Movement Disorders Neurologist

MD, PhD · Johns Hopkins University

Parkinson's & Tremor
"Early intervention in Parkinson's is everything. I want every family to know: the tremor you noticed at Thanksgiving — bring it to us now, not in two years."
Dr. Priya Nair introduction video thumbnail
0:15
Portrait of Dr. Priya Nair, Epilepsy & Seizure Disorders

Dr. Priya Nair

Epilepsy & Seizure Disorders

MD · UCSF Comprehensive Epilepsy Center

Epilepsy
"Most of my patients arrive terrified. By the end of our first conversation, they leave with a name for what's happening — and a plan. That's what we're here for."
Dr. James Whitfield introduction video thumbnail
0:15
Portrait of Dr. James Whitfield, Neuroimmunology & MS

Dr. James Whitfield

Neuroimmunology & MS

MD, FAAN · Cleveland Clinic Neurological Institute

Multiple Sclerosis
"MS management has transformed in the last decade. What used to feel like a life sentence is now a condition we manage together — actively, with real options."
Migraine

When a headache is something your whole nervous system is doing

SWhat you might be feeling

Throbbing pain on one side of my head

Clinical term: Unilateral pulsating cephalgia

Seeing zigzag lines or blind spots before it starts

Clinical term: Visual aura (scintillating scotoma)

Nausea and sensitivity to light and sound

Clinical term: Photophobia, phonophobia, nausea

Feeling wiped out for a day after the headache passes

Clinical term: Postdrome fatigue

DWhat's happening in your nervous system

Trigeminal Pain Pathway
CortexTrigeminalNucleusMeningealVesselsThalamus

Sensitized pain signals travel from meningeal vessels through the trigeminal nerve, amplified in the thalamus.

TTreatment options — least to most involved

1.

Lifestyle triggers diary

Behavioral

Identifying and avoiding personal triggers (sleep, diet, stress, hormones) through a structured log.

Invasiveness1/5
2.

Over-the-counter NSAIDs or triptans

Oral Medication

Ibuprofen or prescription triptans taken at onset to abort the migraine attack.

Invasiveness2/5
3.

Preventive daily medication

Prescription

Beta-blockers, topiramate, or CGRP antagonists taken daily to reduce attack frequency.

Invasiveness3/5
4.

CGRP monoclonal antibody injections

Monthly Injection

Self-administered monthly injections (erenumab, fremanezumab) targeting the CGRP pathway.

Invasiveness4/5

QQuestions patients ask us

Epilepsy

Understanding the electrical storms your brain experiences

SWhat you might be feeling

Blanking out for a few seconds — people say I look absent

Clinical term: Absence seizure (petit mal)

Shaking and losing control of my body

Clinical term: Tonic-clonic (grand mal) seizure

A strange smell or feeling right before it happens

Clinical term: Focal aware seizure (aura)

Confusion and exhaustion after — I don't remember what happened

Clinical term: Postictal state

DWhat's happening in your nervous system

Seizure Propagation Network
Focus ZoneCortexHippocampusThalamus

Abnormal electrical bursts originate in the focus zone and spread through connected neural networks.

TTreatment options — least to most involved

1.

Anti-seizure medication (ASM)

Daily Oral

Levetiracetam, lamotrigine, or valproate — the first-line approach for most epilepsy types.

Invasiveness2/5
2.

Ketogenic diet

Dietary

High-fat, low-carbohydrate diet that alters brain metabolism; particularly effective for children.

Invasiveness2/5
3.

Vagus nerve stimulator (VNS)

Implanted Device

A pacemaker-like device implanted under the skin that sends regular electrical pulses to the vagus nerve.

Invasiveness3/5
4.

Epilepsy surgery

Surgery

Resection of the seizure focus — considered when two ASMs have failed and the focus is clearly localizable.

Invasiveness5/5

QQuestions patients ask us

Multiple Sclerosis

When your immune system mistakes your nervous system for a threat

SWhat you might be feeling

Numbness or tingling that comes and goes in my arms or legs

Clinical term: Relapsing sensory paresthesia

My vision went blurry and painful in one eye

Clinical term: Optic neuritis

I'm exhausted in a way that sleep doesn't fix

Clinical term: MS-related fatigue (lassitude)

My balance feels off and I've had a few near-falls

Clinical term: Cerebellar ataxia

DWhat's happening in your nervous system

Myelin Sheath Disruption
NeuronBodyDemyelinatedSegmentAxonTargetTissue

Immune cells attack the myelin sheath, slowing or blocking electrical signals along the nerve fiber.

TTreatment options — least to most involved

1.

Disease-modifying therapy (DMT)

Daily / Periodic

Interferons, glatiramer, or dimethyl fumarate — reduce relapse frequency and slow progression.

Invasiveness2/5
2.

High-efficacy DMTs (oral)

Oral Prescription

Siponimod, ozanimod — newer oral options with strong efficacy for relapsing MS.

Invasiveness2/5
3.

Infusion therapies (natalizumab, ocrelizumab)

IV Infusion

Administered every 4–6 months in a clinical setting; highly effective for active relapsing MS.

Invasiveness3/5
4.

Hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT)

Procedure

Reserved for aggressive, treatment-resistant MS; resets the immune system.

Invasiveness5/5

QQuestions patients ask us

Parkinson's

A tremor you noticed — and what it might be telling you

SWhat you might be feeling

A tremor in one hand, mostly when the hand is resting

Clinical term: Resting tremor (pill-rolling)

My movements feel slow — it takes longer to button a shirt

Clinical term: Bradykinesia

My handwriting has gotten noticeably smaller

Clinical term: Micrographia

I've lost my sense of smell over the past few years

Clinical term: Anosmia (prodromal symptom)

DWhat's happening in your nervous system

Dopamine Circuit
SubstantiaNigraStriatumMotorCortexThalamus

Dopamine-producing cells in the substantia nigra diminish, disrupting the smooth coordination of movement signals.

TTreatment options — least to most involved

1.

Levodopa / carbidopa

Oral Medication

The gold standard — levodopa replenishes dopamine. Carbidopa prevents nausea and extends its effect.

Invasiveness1/5
2.

Dopamine agonists (pramipexole, ropinirole)

Oral Medication

Mimic dopamine in the brain; often used in younger patients to delay levodopa complications.

Invasiveness2/5
3.

MAO-B inhibitors (rasagiline, selegiline)

Oral Medication

Slow the breakdown of dopamine; mild benefit, sometimes used as initial therapy or add-on.

Invasiveness2/5
4.

Deep Brain Stimulation (DBS)

Surgery

Electrodes implanted in the subthalamic nucleus deliver continuous electrical stimulation; highly effective for motor fluctuations.

Invasiveness5/5

QQuestions patients ask us

Neuropathy

When nerve damage turns ordinary sensation into something strange

SWhat you might be feeling

Burning or shooting pain in my feet, especially at night

Clinical term: Distal symmetric polyneuropathy

My feet feel numb — like I'm walking on cotton

Clinical term: Sensory loss (glove-and-stocking distribution)

My hands feel weak and I keep dropping things

Clinical term: Distal motor weakness

Lightheadedness when I stand up quickly

Clinical term: Autonomic neuropathy (orthostatic hypotension)

DWhat's happening in your nervous system

Peripheral Nerve Damage
SpinalCordNerveRootPeripheralNerveSkin /Muscle

Damage to peripheral nerves disrupts sensation and motor signals between the spinal cord and extremities.

TTreatment options — least to most involved

1.

Address the underlying cause

Causal Treatment

Optimizing blood sugar (diabetic neuropathy), stopping a causative medication, or treating vitamin deficiency.

Invasiveness1/5
2.

Topical treatments (lidocaine, capsaicin)

Topical

Applied directly to painful areas; minimal systemic effects, effective for localized pain.

Invasiveness1/5
3.

Neuropathic pain medications

Oral Prescription

Gabapentin, pregabalin, duloxetine, or tricyclics — reduce pain signal transmission.

Invasiveness2/5
4.

IVIG or plasmapheresis

Infusion / Procedure

For immune-mediated neuropathies (CIDP, GBS); modulates the immune response attacking peripheral nerves.

Invasiveness4/5

QQuestions patients ask us

Not ready to book yet?
Take the guide home with you.

Each condition guide is a plain-language PDF written by our neurologists — the symptoms in your vocabulary, the treatments ranked, and the exact questions to ask at your next appointment. No jargon. No paywall.

Just a first name and email. No spam, ever.

You deserve an explanation
that actually makes sense.

Book a consultation with a board-certified neurologist. Come with your questions. Leave with clarity.