Paul’s Run for Epilepsy in Prospect Heights Benefits Epilepsy Research, Awareness

#ad▼

Paul Schmidt was a young man who grew up in Prospect Heights and died of epilepsy in October of 2008, just shy of his 22nd birthday. Check out and upcoming Run for Epilepsy celebrating his life, as well as raising much-needed awareness and funding for this life-altering and life-threatening condition that affects others. For proceeds to benefit CURE: Citizens United for Research in Epileps, 95 cents of every dollar raised goes directly to research and awareness programs.

Paul’s Run for Epilepsy
Sunday, October 17, 2010

Start
9:00 a.m.

Event
5K Run/Walk
Free “Run Like Paul” Kids’ Races
paulsrunforepilepsy.org

Epilepsy and Health & Wellness Fair

Location
Gary Morava Recreation Center
110 W. Camp McDonald Rd. Prospect Heights, IL 60070

In 2001, at the age of 15, Paul Schmidt experienced his first seizure. After extensive testing, it was determined that he was born with a seizure disorder called juvenile myoclonic epilepsy. For the next six years of his life, Paul faced a grueling uphill battle. He saw many experts in the field within the greater Chicagoland area, and tried many medications (and lots of combination of medications) for epilepsy. In December 2007 Paul underwent a promising surgical treatment: he had the Vagus Nerve Stimulator implanted. Yet, as is the case for over 30% of people with epilepsy, Paul’s seizures remained uncontrollable.

On Friday, October 17th, 2008, twelve days short of his twenty-second
birthday, Paul’s body went into cardiac arrest and his breathing stopped. Two days later he joined the 50,000 Americans who die each year of epilepsy. The cause of Paul’s death was something called SUDEP: sudden unexplained death in epilepsy.

Search Amazon …

Search for products sold on Amazon:

Arlingtoncardinal.com is an Amazon Associate website, which means that a small percentage of your purchases gets paid to Arlingtoncardinal.com at no extra cost to you. When you use the search boxes above, any Amazon banner ad, or any product associated with an Amazon banner on this website, you help pay expenses related to maintaining Arlingtoncardinal.com and creating new services and ideas for a resourceful website. See more info at Arlingtoncardinal.com/AdDisclosure

1 Comment

  1. Thanks so much for including this article! Epilepsy affects so many people, it would be wonderful to see a piece shedding even more light on what the condition is and how it affects people.

Comments are closed.