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You completed the fellowship. You managed the refractory cases, interpreted the overnight EEGs, sat in the surgical conferences, and counseled the patients whose seizures no one else could control. The expertise is yours. What stands between you and the certification that says so officially is one examination - 220 questions, one sitting, and a two-year wait before the next opportunity if the first does not go as planned.
That is not a small thing. And it deserves more than a generic neurology resource hastily repurposed for a subspecialty examination it was never designed to address.
The epilepsy subspecialty certification examination is not a longer version of the general neurology boards. It demands granular command of seizure classification under the 2017 ILAE framework, independent mastery of EEG interpretation across all age groups, and pharmacological precision that extends from phenobarbital through cenobamate. Candidates who arrive without subspecialty-level preparation find that distinction out the hard way.
Every domain the certification examination tests is covered at the depth it deserves. Seizure classification is taught with the mechanistic reasoning the examination requires - not just the current terminology, but the clinical scenarios and semiological features that distinguish one classification from another. EEG interpretation is approached as an active examination discipline - systematic, precisely categorized, and connected directly to the diagnostic and management decisions that constitute the most heavily weighted competency domain on the test. Pharmacotherapy spans classical agents through the newest approved medications, covering mechanisms, pharmacokinetics, drug interactions, syndrome-specific selection, and the medication contraindications that examination questions are specifically designed to expose.
Fifteen chapters address the complete range of epilepsy syndromes across the full lifespan - neonatal through elderly - alongside structural and metabolic epilepsies, status epilepticus management, nonepileptic paroxysmal disorders, presurgical evaluation, neuromodulation, genetics, neuroimmunology, and systems-based practice. Every domain on the examination content blueprint is represented. Nothing has been approximated, condensed for convenience, or left to chance.
Two full-length practice examinations - 220 questions each, matching the exact count of the certification examination - are included with detailed rationale explanations for every correct answer. These questions are written at examination difficulty, in examination style, and calibrated to the clinical precision the actual test demands.
You have done the clinical work. You have earned the knowledge. This guide makes certain the examination reflects that.
The certification window is finite. The preparation window is right now.Disclaimer: This guide is an independent educational resource designed solely for exam preparation. It is not affiliated with, sponsored by, or endorsed by any medical certification board or organization. This material is not a substitute for formal medical training or independent clinical judgment, and its use does not guarantee a passing score on any examination.
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