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Keywords
epilepsy, late-life epilepsy, incident epilepsy
Abstract
Epilepsy in late life is influenced by biological, behavioral, social and environmental factors
Lifetime occupation type may capture socioeconomic, environmental, and long-term physical exposures relevant to brain health (e.g., manual labor, stress levels, neurotoxic exposures) that could influence neurological aging
BYU ScholarsArchive Citation
Gutierrez, Daniel Guerrero; Maia, Sofia Pelagalli; Choi, Hyunmi; Gutierrez, Jose; Bello, Natalie; Biggs, Mary L.; Briceño, Emily M.; Burke, James F.; Colantonio, Lisandro D.; Elkind, Mitchell S.V.; Fitzpatrick, Annette L.; Gonzalez, Christopher; Gross, Alden L.; Huang, Lei; Johnson, Emily L.; Johnson, W. Craig; Leu, Cheng-Shiun; Levine, Deborah A.; Liu, Minghua; Longstreth, W.T. Jr.; Mayeux, Richard P.; Misiewicz, Sylwia; Reyes-Dumeyer, Dolly; Rundek, Tatjana; Sanchez, Danurys; Shea, Steven J.; Wang, Tian; Shu, Carolyn W.; and Thacker, Evan L., "Self-Reported Longest-Held Occupation Type in Relation to Epilepsy in Late Life: A Pooled Cohort Analysis of Incidence and Prevalence" (2026). Library/Life Sciences Undergraduate Poster Competition 2026. 13.
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/library_studentposters_2026/13
Document Type
Poster
Publication Date
2026-03-26
Language
English
College
Life Sciences
Department
Public Health
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