Scellig S. D. Stone |Medical Services
Specialities
Departments
Languages
- English
Scellig S. D. Stone |Education
Undergraduate School
Queen’s University
1999, Kingston, Canada
Medical School
University of Toronto
2003, Toronto, Canada
Residency
Neurosurgery
University of Toronto
2013, Toronto, Canada
Fellowship
Pediatric Neurosurgery
欧宝彩票平台
2014, Boston, MA
Scellig S. D. Stone |Professional History
我的实践主要集中在儿童的功能障碍上,包括运动障碍,痉挛和癫痫病的治疗方法,重点是提前的微创技术,例如MRI引导的激光消融,深层脑刺激,立体脑脑摄影,精选的背部rhizotsal rhizotsomy and Neuroendomysoppy。
I hold both a medical degree and a PhD in neuroscience from the Institute of Medical Science at the University of Toronto, training that gives me a unique perspective on the treatment of neurosurgical patients. I completed the prestigious Shillito neurosurgical fellowship at Boston Children's Hospital in 2014, and am the founding surgical director of our department's movement disorders and deep brain stimulation program.
As an example, one of my clinical work focuses is on advanced neurosurgical treatments for dystonia, a movement disorder in which faulty brain signals cause involuntary muscle contractions in children. I specialize in deep brain stimulation, a surgical procedure in which I implant electrodes on different targets in the brain to deliver electrical stimulation to those areas via a simultaneously-implanted pacemaker-like device called a neurostimulator. Deep brain stimulation is currently indicated for primary dystonia, and holds enormous future potential for other conditions.
I also run a general neurosurgical practice, encompassing areas such as brain tumors, neuroendoscopy and epilepsy surgeries. I am a passionate advocate for dystonia awareness and the potential application of deep brain stimulation for patients, and have been an invited speaker locally and internationally on the topic.
As a surgeon-scientist, I am interested in encouraging functional regeneration and repair of the brain using targeting therapies such as deep brain stimulation. Through understanding mechanisms of adult neurogenesis and neurostimulation, I am hopeful that we will be able to harness intrinsic brain mechanisms to repair and restore damaged and diseased brain.