MDA CLINICAL-RESEARCH CHATS -- GUEST HOSTS
John R. Bach, M.D.
Dr. Bach received his medical degree from the College of Medicine and Dentistry
of New Jersey in 1976, and completed his residency training in Physical
Medicine and Rehabilitation at New York University in 1980. He is a fellow of
the Association of Academic Physiatrists, the American College of Chest
Physicians and a fellow of the American Academy of Physical Medicine and
Rehabilitation. Since 1983, Dr. Bach has been on the faculty of the UMDNJ-New
Jersey Medical School where he currently is Professor of Physical Medicine and
Rehabilitation; Vice Chairman of the Department of Physical Medicine and
Rehabilitation and Professor of Neurosciences in the Department of
Neurosciences. At University Hospital, Newark, N.J., Dr. Bach is Director of
Research and Associate Medical Director of the Department of Physical Medicine
and Rehabilitation, and Medical Director of the Center for Ventilator
Management Alternatives. He is also Co-director of the medical school's Jerry
Lewis MDA neuromuscular clinic. More information is available in Dr. Bach's
website at http://www.doctorbach.com/.
Sallie Bitner, M.S., R.R.T.
Ms. Bitner received her BS in psychology from Loyola University in Chicago and
her associate's degree in respiratory care from Pima Community College in
Tucson. She’s done postgraduate work in counseling and guidance at the
University of Arizona in Tucson and obtained her MS in health science from
Northwestern University – International. She has been a Joint Commission on
Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO) home care surveyor since 1995
and is trained under the Accreditation Manual for Home Care. Ms. Bitner is a
clinical respiratory specialist and home medical equipment surveyor. She is now
a program information officer for MDA.
Louis J. Boitano, M.S., R.R.T.
Mr. Boitano is a respiratory therapist for the Pulmonary Clinic at the
University of Washington Medical Center in Seattle, Washington. He works with
Dr. Joshua Benditt in a sub-specialty neuromuscular/pulmonary clinic supporting
people with neuromuscular affected respiratory insufficiency. Mr. Boitano and
Dr. Benditt are principles in the Northwest Assistive Breathing Center, a
center of excellence within the University of Washington School of Medicine,
founded for research and development in noninvasive ventilation support for
people with neuromuscular weakness. Mr. Boitano received his BS and MS from
Central Washington University, and his associate degree in respiratory care
from Seattle Central Community College.
Walter G. Bradley, D.M., F.R.C.P.
Dr. Bradley went to college and medical school at Oxford University and did his
residency training in internal medicine in neurology in Oxford, London and
Newcastle Upon Tyne, England. He returned to Boston in 1977 as Vice Chairman of
the Department of Neurology at Tufts-New England Medical Center, with Dr.
Theodore Munsat. He took up the chairmanship of the Department of Neurology in
the University of Vermont in 1982. He moved in 1990 to his current position of
Chairman of the Department of Neurology at the University of Miami School of
Medicine where he serves as Medical Director of the Kessenich Family MDA ALS
Center. Websites: www.miami-als.org and www.als-miami.org.
Greg Carter, M.D.
Dr. Carter is the Director of the regional MDA Center in Olympia, Washington
and co-director of the MDA/ALS Center at the University of Washington in
Seattle, WA. He also serves as the Regional Medical Director of Physical
Medicine & Rehabilitation services for the Providence Health System in
Southwest Washington. Dr. Carter is a member of the MDA Clinic Services
Advisory Committee.
Salvatore DiMauro, M.D.
Dr. DiMauro is a longtime MDA research grantee and has devoted his career to
unraveling the secrets of how muscles make and use energy -- and how they
sometimes don't, resulting in the disorders known as metabolic and
mitochondrial myopathies. He is the Lucy G. Moses Professor of Neurology at the
Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons in New York; has served
as an MDA scientific adviser and has written hundreds of articles and book
chapters on muscle disorders. See the Quest article "Hooked on Mitochondria".
Carlos Garcia, M.D.
Dr. Garcia is an MDA Clinic Director and Professor of Clinical Neurology and
Clinical Professor of Pathology, Neuromuscular Disorders, Neuroscience Program,
Tulane University, New Orleans, Louisiana. His specialties include clinical and
molecular genetic aspects of Charcot-Marie-Tooth, muscular dystrophies and
familial spastic paraparesis, and neuropathology with emphasis in the pathology
of muscle and nerve. More details are at http://www.tmc.tulane.edu/neurograd/garcchm.htm#CarlosGarcia.
Edward
Goldstein, M.D.
Dr. Goldstein is Co-Director of the MDA Clinic, Children's Healthcare of
Atlanta at Scottish Rite, Georgia, http://www.choa.org/neurosciences/mda-sr.shtml. His special interests
include muscular dystrophy, spasticity and BOTOX therapy. His professional
associations include the Child Neurology Society and the American Academy of
Neurology.
Jonathan Goldstein, M.D.
Dr. Goldstein received his M.D. from Brown University in Providence, RI in
1986. He subsequently received his Neurology Residency and training in
neuromuscular diseases from Yale University School of Medicine from 1987-1992.
He has been on the faculty of the Department of Neurology at Yale School of
Medicine since 1990 and is currently Associate Professor of Neurology, Director
of the Yale MDA/ALS clinic and involved with clinical research in neuromuscular
disease. More information can be found at the website http://info.med.yale.edu/neurol/programs/neuromuscular.html.
George Karpati, M.D.
Dr. Karpati is a graduate of Dalhousie Medical School at Halifax, Nova Scotia.
He is a physician scientist engaged in both clinical neuromuscular Neurology
and myopathology as well as laboratory research in gene therapy for genetic
muscle diseases. He holds the title of I. Walton Killam Chair and Professor of
Neurology and Neurosciences at the Montreal Neurological Institute (MNI) of
McGill University at Montreal, Canada. He is coordinator of the Neuromuscular
Group at the MNI, which is a large and highly productive clinical and research
group in this field. He has published close to 300 peer-reviewed scientific
papers and review articles. During the past 3 years he edited 3 major books in
the neuromuscular field, and was author of 2 authoritative books in the same
field. He received numerous distinctions including being an elected Fellow of
the Royal Society of Canada (Can. Academy of Sciences) and an Officer of the
Order of Canada, the country's highest civilian award. Dr. Karpati served as a
member of the Medical Advisory Board of MDA for many years.
Wendy M. King, P.T.
Ms. King is a licensed physical therapist who has specialized in neuromuscular
diseases for over 20 years. She received her B.A. at Ohio University and post
baccalaureate degree in physical therapy from The Ohio State University. She is
currently a clinical assistant professor in the Department of Neurology at OSU
and has extensive experience as an evaluator in clinical trials of Duchenne,
FSHD, Kennedy’s disease, LGMD, IBM, ALS and other NM diseases. She is a PT
consultant at the MDA clinic at Ohio State and has co-authored numerous
articles in the neuromuscular field.
John Kissel, M.D.
Dr. Kissel is currently Professor of Neurology and Vice-Chair of the Department
of Neurology at The Ohio State University (OSU) in Columbus. He did his
residency at Washington University in St. Louis, followed by one year of
clinical neuromuscular fellowship and two years of research fellowship at OSU.
He has been on the staff at OSU since 1985 in the Division of Neuromuscular
Diseases, and is co-director of the Muscular Dystrophy Clinic there. Dr. Kissel
has published extensively in a wide range of peripheral nerve, muscle, and
anterior horn cell disorders. His particular interests include
facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy, and clinical trials in the various
muscular dystrophies and inflammatory myopathies. He has also participated in
clinical trials for the involving the inflammatory neuropathies, anterior horn
cell diseases, and myasthenia gravis. He is the co-author of a popular textbook
of peripheral nerve disease, “Diagnosis and Management of Peripheral Nerve
Disorders,” and has written chapters for many of the standard neuromuscular
textbooks. He is president-elect of the neuromuscular section of the American
Academy of Neurology, a Fellow in the American Academy of Neurology, and a
member of the American Neurological Association.
Albert R. LaSpada, M.D., Ph.D.
Dr. La Spada is Assistant Professor of Laboratory Medicine,Adjunct Assistant Professor of
Neurology, Adjunct Assistant Professor of Medical Genetics, and a Research
Affiliate of theCenter on Human Development and Disability at the University of
Washington Medical Center in Seattle. His research focuses on understanding
neuromuscular and neurodegenerative disease. In1991, he discovered the cause of
X-linked spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy (SBMA, Kennedy's disease), finding
for the first time that trinucleotide repeats could expand in length to causean
inherited human disease. Since this discovery, 14 more neurological diseases
have been shown to be caused by trinucleotide repeat expansions, including
Huntington's disease, myotonic dystrophy and two forms of mental retardation.
SBMA is a lower motor neuron disease caused by polyglutamine repeatexpansions
in the androgen receptor (AR). Dr. La Spada's team is trying to understand why
motor neurons are exquisitely sensitive to glutamine tract expansions in AR by
developing a variety of in vitro and in vivo models and how these disease
mutations lead to the specific demise of nerve cells. Most recently, his group
has been successful in creating a highly representative mouse model of SBMA by
introducing a mutant version of the entire human AR gene into mice. Such work
should go a long way toward the goal of developing treatments for SBMA and
related motor neuron diseases.
Christian Lorson, Ph.D.
Dr. Lorson received his degree in Molecular Microbiology and Immunology from
the University of Missouri Medical School in 1997. As a post-doctoral fellow at
Tufts University School of Medicine, he began to examine the molecular basis of
spinal muscular atrophy and has made contributions to understanding the
molecular basis of this neuromuscular disorder. In 2000, Dr. Lorson received a
New Investigator Development Award from MDA and soon joined the faculty at
Arizona State University as an Assistant Professor in Biology. In 2002, Dr.
Lorson and his laboratory moved to the University of Missouri, where he is
currently an Assistant Professor and Associate Chairman of the Department of
Veterinary Pathobiology.
Dennis J. Matthews, M.D.
Dr. Matthews is Chairman/Associate Professor, Dept. of Rehabilitation Medicine
at The Children’s Hospital and the University of Colorado School of Medicine in
Denver. Co-sponsored by MDA, he established and directed the Neuromuscular
Clinic at the University of Minnesota (1979-84) and The Children’s Hospital
Muscle Clinic beginning in 1988. The latter is a multi-specialty clinic to
evaluate, diagnose and treat children and adolescents with neuromuscular
disorders. Writing and lecturing extensively on the rehabilitation management
of neuromuscular disorders, he presently serves on the NIH Task Force on
Childhood Motor Disorders. His efforts helped create one of the premier
pediatric rehabilitation medicine programs in the U.S. and assembled a team of
highly qualified researchers interested in rehabilitation science. He is an
editor of “Brain Injury,” “American Journal of Physical Medicine &
Rehabilitation” and ‘Pediatric Rehabilitation.”
Robert McMichael, M.D.
Dr. McMichael is the MDA Clinic Director in the Ft. Worth-Arlington, Texas
area. Read more about Dr. McMichael in theQuest article at http://www.mda.org/publications/Quest/q62mcmichael.html .
Elizabeth McNally, M.D., Ph.D.
Dr. McNally received her M.D. and Ph.D. from Albert Einstein College of
Medicine. She completed her postgraduate training in Internal Medicine and
Cardiology at the Brigham and Women's Hospital. She is a board-certified
cardiologist specializing in genetic forms of heart disease, including the
heart disease that can accompany muscular dystrophy. She is an assistant
professor in the Departments of Medicine and Human Genetics at the University
of Chicago where she serves as the Director of Cardiovascular Research. Her
research emphasizes mechanisms of muscle dysfunction in muscular dystrophy. She
serves on the Scientific Advisory Committee for the MDA.
Darren Monckton, Ph.D.
Dr. Monckton is a Lister Institute Research Fellow and Reader in Genetics
within the Institute of Biomedical and Life Sciences at the University of
Glasgow. He received his PhD from the University of Leicester in 1992 and held
postdoctoral positions in at Baylor College of Medicine and MD Anderson Cancer
Center, Houston, Texas. It was whilst studying at Baylor that he became
interested in myotonic dystrophy and his research group continues to be very
active in attempting to understand the molecular genetics of myotonic dystrophy
and other related disorders. Most recently, he was chair of the 4th
International Myotonic Dystrophy Consortium Meeting held in Glasgow, April
2003.
Leslie Morrison, M.D.
Dr. Morrison originated and has directed the Pediatric MDA Clinic at the
University of New Mexico since 1995. She has taken care of children with
neuromuscular diseases since her first career in pediatric physical therapy.
Through medical school at the University of New Mexico and residency training
at Johns Hopkins Hospital (completed 1992), her interest in these disorders has
grown. Clinical interests include inherited diseases of nerve and muscle,
especially those that disproportionately affect New Mexican families. She has
research projects in myotonic, oculopharyngeal and Duchenne muscular
dystrophies. She loves mentoring students, residents, and young faculty and is
developing a project for teaching primary care physicians about child neurology
topics. Family workshops are being planned for Duchenne and oculopharyngeal
muscular dystrophy. She has served as an executive board member of New Mexico
MDA, and as an MDA camp physician. Nationally, she currently serves on the
executive boards of the Child Neurology Foundation, the Transverse Myelitis
Association, as a member of the Practice Parameter committee of the Child
Neurology Society, and as an examiner for the National Board of Psychiatry and
Neurology, and on the Recertification Committee for Child Neurology.
Tahseen Mozaffar, M.D.
Dr. Mozaffar obtained his M.D. from the Aga Khan University in Karachi,
Pakistan and trained in neurology at Washington University in St. Louis. At
Washington University's Jerry Lewis Neuromuscular Research Center, he was a
clinical and research fellow in neuromuscular disorders. He held faculty
positions at Washington University and at the Aga Khan University before his
appointment as Assistant Professor and Director of the Neuromuscular Program at
University of California at Irvine (UCI). He directs the MDA Clinic and the UCI
MDA-ALS Research and Clinical Center. He has published over a dozen articles in
peer-reviewed journals. His interest in basic research is mechanisms of muscle
atrophy and in clinical research is estimation of exercise tolerance in
neuromuscular disorders.
Edward Anthony Oppenheimer, M.D.
Dr. Oppenheimer is an Associate Clinical Professor of Medicine at UCLA School
of Medicine and previously Chief of Pulmonary Medicine at the Kaiser Permanente
Los Angeles Medical Center. He has over twenty-five years experience with the
clinical care of people with neuromuscular and musculoskeletal diseases and a
particular interest in ALS. He developed a large regional program for the home
care of children and adults in Southern California in 1985, and has been active
both nationally and internationally in clinical research and education related
to home mechanical ventilation. Dr. Oppenheimer assisted with the production of
two MDA educational videotapes: "Breathe Easy" (for patients and families) and
"Breath of Life" (for professional use). You will find it helpful to review the transcript of Dr. Oppenheimer’s Respiratory/Ventilation chat from last
year.
Thomas A. Rando, M.D., Ph.D.
Dr. Rando received his M.D. and Ph.D. from Harvard Medical School. He completed
his residency training in Neurology at the University of California at San
Francisco. Currently, he is an Associate Professor in the Department of
Neurology and Neurological Sciences at Stanford University School of Medicine
where he is Director of the Muscular Dystrophy Clinic. He is also Chief of
Neurology and Director of the Geriatric Research, Education and Clinical Center
at the Palo Alto VA Medical Center. Dr. Rando's research concerns the
mechanisms of muscle degeneration in the muscular dystrophies, gene therapy for
these disorders, and the cellular and molecular basis of age-related changes in
muscle. Dr. Rando has served on the Medical Advisory Committee for the MDA
since 2001.
Jerold Reynolds, Ph.D., R.T.
Dr. Reynolds has been a respiratory therapist with the Ohio State University
for 25 years. He currently is a faculty member of the OSU Department of
Neurology and has a private practice of primarily neuromuscular patients. Along
with Dr. Steven Nash and Dr. John Kissel, Dr. Reynolds helps run the OSU/MDA
ALS Clinic. Dr. Reynolds is active in medical research as well as patient care
and he has been published in several medical journals. He was nominated for the
Lawrence A. Rand Award for his work with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS).
Jeffrey Rosenfeld, Ph.D., M.D.
Dr. Rosenfeld received his Ph.D. in neuroanatomy from the University of
Connecticut in 1983. Following his experience at Johns Hopkins Hospital as a
research associate he earned an M.D. degree at the University of Maryland. He
completed a Neurology residency at the University of Pennsylvania followed by a
faculty position at Emory University where he established the ALS/MDA clinic.
Dr. Rosenfeld moved to the Carolinas Medical Center in 1998 to establish the
Carolinas Neuromuscular/ALS-MDA Center, initiated by a significant endowment
from the Charlotte community. Since the Program was initiated, patients have
traveled to the Center in Charlotte from over 25 states and four countries.
Most recently, the Carolinas Neuromuscular/ALS Center has received an
additional $5 million private gift to further research in Limb Girdle Muscular
Dystrophy. Dr Rosenfeld has published numerous articles and chapters and
currently maintains an active clinical and basic science research program in
motor neuron disease.
Zarife Sahenk, M.D., Ph.D.
Dr. Sahenk received her medical training at Hacettepe University Medical
School, Ankara, Turkey, 1967-1972, and specialty training in neuromuscular
diseases at The Ohio State University, Neuroscience Graduate Program,
1993-1998. She was the recipient of the MDA Clinical Fellowship, 1975-1976, and
MDA Post-Doctoral Research Fellowship, 1976-1978. Dr. Sahenk was a Resident in
Neurology, Hacettepe University, August 1972 - October 1972 and a Resident in
Neurology, Department of Medicine, Division of Neurology, Ohio State University
Hospitals, Columbus, Ohio, October 1972 - June 1975. She is now the Director of
the Clinical and Experimental Neuromuscular Disease Laboratories, Division of
Neuromuscular Disease, Department of Neurology, Ohio State University
Hospitals. Her research and specialty interests are muscle and nerve disease,
toxic neuropathies (drug induced), motor neuron disease (ALS), neuromuscular
diseases, muscle and nerve biopsies; recent research involved CMT neuropathy
gene mutations and their role in pathogenesis and studies on the abnormal
Schwann cell-axon interactions in CMT.
Jeremy M. Shefner, M.D., Ph.D.
Dr. Shefner received a Ph.D. in Experimental Psychology from the University of
Illinois in 1976, and an M.D. from Northwestern University in 1983.
Postgraduate work in neurology and neurophysiology was performed at Harvard
Medical School. He directed the ALS clinic at the Brigham and Women's Hospital
in Boston until 1996, when he moved to SUNY Upstate Medical University. He
currently directs the MDA/ALS Research and Treatment Center at Upstate, and
conducts research on the physiology of ALS in animal models, as well as
clinical trials on potential ALS therapeutics. He is co-chairperson of the
Northeast ALS Clinical Trials Consortium.
Nailah Siddique, RN, MSN
Ms. Siddique is a clinical nurse specialist with the Neuromuscular Disorders
Program at Northwestern University. She holds a BSN from George Mason
University and an MSN from the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill. She
has worked in several major medical centers in neuroscience nursing, including
NIH, UCLA and Duke. Since 1996 she has been at Northwestern, where she is part
of the neurogenetics research team. She recruits families for genetic studies
and counsels patients and families regarding ALS and related disorders.
Mark Tarnopolsky, MD, PhD, FRCP (C)
Dr. Tarnopolsky is a clinician-scientist and holds an endowed professorship in
neuromuscular diseases at the Hamilton Hospitals Assessment Centre, McMaster
University, Ontario, Canada. He has established a clinic to investigate and
follow children and adults with suspected neuromuscular and neurometabolic
disorders. The clinic offers a range of services from molecular and metabolic
testing through to the physical medicine and rehabilitation aspects of
long-term care for such patients. He also conducts research in the areas of
muscle metabolism, experimental therapeutics for neuromuscular and metabolic
diseases. Another strong emphasis is on the evaluation of nutrition, exercise
and pharmacological strategies to enhance muscle function in health (sports)
and disease (neuromuscular and neurometabolic). Dr. Tarnopolsky completed his
bachelor of physical education (chancellor’s gold medal) and medical degree
(MD) at McMaster University. Following this, he completed a PhD in nutrition
and muscle metabolism at McMaster University) and then completed clinical
sub-specialty medical training in internal medicine, neurology and physical
medicine and rehabilitation at McMaster University and the University of
Rochester (New York).
Gayle Traver RN, MSN
Ms. Traver is Associate Professor Emeritus, College of Nursing, and Clinical
Assistant Professor of Medicine at the College of Medicine, University of
Arizona and consulting clinical nurse specialist at University Medical Center
in Tucson. She has been a pulmonary clinical nurse specialist for over 35
years. She has published numerous articles in medical and nursing journals,
written two textbooks and patient education materials. She is presently
involved in the development of the Southwest Ventilation Program at the Arizona
Respiratory Center, University of Arizona.
Michael Weiss, M.D.
Dr. Weiss is the Co-Director of the MDA/ALS Center and Director of EMG at the
University of Washington Medical Center in Seattle. He has a special interest
in both amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and Charcot-Marie-Tooth (CMT) disease and
is currently investigating in the laboratory whether certain nerve growth
factors can have a beneficial effect on a mouse model for CMT.
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