Neurologists


Alexandra Adler ( September 24, 1901 – January 4, 2001) was a neurologist and the daughter of psychoanalyst Alfred Adler. ...more on Wikipedia about "Alexandra Adler"

Alfons Maria Jakob ( July 2, 1884 – October 17, 1931) was a German neurologist. He was the first to recognize and describe Alper's disease and Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (the latter with Hans Gerhard Creutzfeldt) and helped greatly in the description of various other neurological illnesses. ...more on Wikipedia about "Alfons Maria Jakob"

Edmé Félix Alfred Vulpian (born January 5, 1826, Paris, France; died May 18, 1887) was a French physician and neurologist. He was the co-discoverer of Vulpian-Bernard spinal muscular atrophy and the Vulpian-Heidenhain-Sherrington phenomenon. ...more on Wikipedia about "Alfred Vulpian"

Alvaro Pascual-Leone (born Valencia, Spain, 8/6/61) has been an associate professor of neurology at Harvard Medical School since 1997. He is the Director of the Center for Noninvasive Brain Stimulation and Associate Director of the General Clinical Research Center of the Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston. ...more on Wikipedia about "Alvaro Pascual-Leone"

Arnold Pick (( July 20 1851 - April 4 1924) was a Czechoslovakian neurologist and psychiatrist . He is known for identifying the clinical syndrome of Pick's Disease and the ' Pick bodies' that are characteristic of the disorder. ...more on Wikipedia about "Arnold Pick"

Arthur Lester Benton, Ph.D., (born 1909) is a neuropsychologist and Emeritus Professor of Neurology and Psychology at the University of Iowa. ...more on Wikipedia about "Arthur L. Benton"

Charles-Édouard Brown-Sequard (variant Charles Edward), British physiologist and neurologist, was born at Port Louis, Mauritius, on the April 8th 1817. His father was an American and his mother a Frenchwoman, but he himself always desired to be looked upon as a British subject. ...more on Wikipedia about "Charles-Édouard Brown-Séquard"

Just shortopedia way Neurologists

Mário Corino da Costa Andrade ( 10 June 1906 – 16 June 2005) was a leading twentieth century Portuguese neurologist and researcher who first described the familial amyloidotic polyneuropathy (FAP) syndome that later came to be associated with his name (Corino de Andrade disease). ...more on Wikipedia about "Corino Andrade"

Dr. Deborah Mash is a professor of neurology and molecular and cellular pharmacology at the University of Miami School of Medicine. She is the world's foremost scientific expert on the hallucinogenic drug, ibogaine. ...more on Wikipedia about "Deborah Mash"

>Erwin Ringel ( April 27, 1921 – July 28, 1994) was an Austrian psychiatrist and neurologist who dedicated his life to suicide prevention and who, in 1960, defined the presuicidal syndrome. ...more on Wikipedia about "Erwin Ringel"

Heinrich Gross ( 1914 – December 15, 2005) was an Austrian psychiatrist, medical doctor and neurologist, best known for his alleged role in the murder of hundreds of children with physical, mental and/or emotional/behavioral characteristics considered "unclean" by the Nazi regime. A significant element of the controversy surrounding Dr. Gross' activities is that after the children had been murdered, parts of their bodies, particularly their brains, were preserved and retained for future study for decades after the murders. It was only on April 28 2002 that the preserved remains of these murdered children were finally buried. ...more on Wikipedia about "Heinrich Gross"

Hermann Oppenheim ( January 1, 1858, Warburg - May 5, 1919, Berlin) was one of the leading Neurologists in Germany. ...more on Wikipedia about "Hermann Oppenheim"

Jerome Ysroael Lettvin is a professor at the ...more on Wikipedia about "Jerome Lettvin"

Jonathan D Bui (b 1972) is an American scientist and physician (neurologist). ...more on Wikipedia about "Jonathan Bui"

Josemir W. Sander, also known as Ley Sander, is the NSE Professor of Neurology and Clinical Epilepsy at the Institute of Neurology of University College London . He is Honorary Consultant Neurologist at the National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery , Queen Square, in London UK, and at the National Society for Epilepsy in Buckinghamshire. Ley Sander is Head of the World Health Organization Collaborative Centre for Research and Training in Neurosciences, London and Director of the Clinical Trials Unit at the Chalfont Centre for Epilepsy. He is based at the Department of Clinical and Experimental Epilepsy and works closely together with John S. Duncan, Simon Shorvon, Sanjay Sisodiya, Matthew Walker, Mathias Koepp and other colleagues. ...more on Wikipedia about "Ley Sander"

Marc Dax ( 1771- 1837) was a French neurologist, sometimes credited for discovering the link between neurological damage to the left hemisphere, right-sided hemiplegia, and a loss of the ability to produce speech ( aphasia). He submitted his discovery, based on the observations of three patients in Montpellier, to the French Academy of Sciences and two previous notes were published in 1836, 25 years before Paul Broca's more famous description. His papers were titled Observations tending to prove the constant coincidence of disturbances of speech with a lesion of the left hemisphere of the brain, and Lesions of the left half of the encephalon coincident with the forgetting of signs of thinking. He died one year later and thus his discovery remained obscure. ...more on Wikipedia about "Marc Dax"

Max Nonne (born January 13 1861, Hamburg - died 1959) was a German neurologist. ...more on Wikipedia about "Max Nonne"

Oskar Vogt was a German physician (born April 6, 1870 - July 30, 1959). ...more on Wikipedia about "Oskar Vogt"

Dr Walter Russell Brain, 1st Baron Brain ( October 23 1895– December 29 1966) was a United Kingdom neurologist. He was principal author of the standard work of neurology, "Brain's Diseases of the Nervous System", and longtime editor of the neurological medical journal titled Brain. He is also eponymised with "Brain's reflex", a reflex exhibited by humans when assuming the quadripedian position. ...more on Wikipedia about "Russell Brain, 1st Baron Brain"

Théphile Alajouanine ( June 12 1890, Verneix-Allier – 1980) was a French neurologist. ...more on Wikipedia about "Théophile Alajouanine"

Werner Villinger ( 1887- 1961) was a Nazi German psychiatrist, neurologist, eugenicist and the leading physician at the Bethel Institution ("Anstalt Bethel"). ...more on Wikipedia about "Werner Villinger"

William Hammesfahr is an American neurologist practising in Clearwater, Florida, who specializes in treating stroke victims. He is best known for his involvement in the Terri Schiavo case, during which he examined Schiavo and testified on behalf of her parents. ...more on Wikipedia about "William Hammesfahr"

Sir William Richard Gowers ( March 20 1845 – May 4 1915) was a British neurologist. ...more on Wikipedia about "William Richard Gowers"

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