Epilepsy Research Award from the American Epilepsy Society (1994), Cleveland Clinic Master Clinician Award, Herbert H. Jasper Award from the American Clinical Neurophysiology Society (2021), J. Kiffin Penry Award for Excellence in Epilepsy Care from the American Epilepsy Society (2022)
Elaine Wyllie (born August 26, 1953) is a professor emeritus of neurology at the
Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine and emeritus staff physician in Cleveland Clinic's Epilepsy Center. Her research focused on the role of epilepsy surgery in children with drug-resistant seizures.[3]: 991–993 [4]
In 2021, her clinical work was highlighted in a commemorative video [5] for the 100th anniversary of Cleveland Clinic.
In 1985, Wyllie joined the staff of Cleveland Clinic's neurology department. In 1988 she organized the first Cleveland Clinic International Epilepsy Symposium, focused on pediatric epilepsy.[6]
In the 1990s, together with her colleagues, Wyllie helped to establish a distinct program for delivery of epilepsy care to pediatric patients in the Cleveland Clinic Epilepsy Center. She also worked on the national level to focus attention on pediatric epilepsy education and research, serving on many committees within the
American Epilepsy Society and other medical organizations.[3]
Wyllie's research has focused on surgical intervention for children with uncontrolled seizures to improve quality of life and maximize developmental potential.[7][8][9] Her work helped broaden the selection criteria for surgery to include children with non-localized EEG patterns when an early developmental brain abnormality is present,
[10] and children with MRI abnormalities in both brain hemispheres when seizures arise from just one side.[11] These concepts have been adopted at epilepsy centers worldwide.[12][13][14]
Wyllie is the editor of Wyllie's Treatment of Epilepsy, now in its seventh edition.[15] She authored Cleveland Clinic Guide to Epilepsy,[16] a book for families experiencing epilepsy. Wyllie has also published and presented her research widely in hundreds of articles and presentations.[3]
Awards and honors
Epilepsy Research Award from the American Epilepsy Society, 1994[17]