James D. Guest, MD, PhD

Associate Professor of Neurological Surgery

tel: 305-243-6946

For Patients

Board Certifications
American Board of Neurological Surgery

Practice Locations
University of Miami Hospital

Languages Spoken
English

Education
University of British Columbia
Vancouver, Canada
Residency Division of Neurosurgery 1998
Barrow Neurologic Institute
Phoenix, AZ
Fellowship 1998
Neuroscience
Miami, FL
Ph.D. 1996
University of Alberta
Edmonton, Canada
Graduate MD 1989
University of Alberta
Edmonton, Canada
Undergraduate (BA, BSc) 1985

Dr. Guest has pursued treatment of spinal cord injury and disease for more than 15 years. He is extensively involved in national and international spinal cord injury research communities, employing his clinical and basic science knowledge in several arenas. He serves on the scientific committees of highly respected organizations such as the International Spinal Research Trust, the International Campaign for Cures of Spinal Cord Injury Paralysis, and the American Spinal Injury Association, and he recently completed a five year term as co-chair of the AANS/CNS Joint Section Spine and Peripheral Nerves Research Committee. In December, 2005, he was invited to speak and to chair a discussion group at the First International Spinal Cord Injury Treatments and Trials Symposium in Hong Kong. He has given a total of 24 invited lectures in the and abroad, and has authored over 70 peer reviewed publications, including articles, book chapters and abstracts. Currently, he is acquiring expertise in the area of spinal cord injury clinical trials.

Cervical spinal cord injury and pathology, and the management of spinal pain are his main clinical interests. Although he has several years of surgical experience, he seeks to move toward less invasive procedures, whenever possible, in his practice. This interest has allowed Dr. Guest to work in partnership with medical professionals in the development of new experimental techniques and technology, and he currently holds a patent for percutaneous endoscope transplantation into the spinal cord.

Dr. Guest truly esteems the stimulating scientific atmosphere at the Miami Project to Cure Paralysis, where he has mentored 12 research students and fellows, and has benefited from ongoing interactions with the glial cell transplantation group. He is a faculty member of the Neuroscience Graduate Program. He finds teaching and scientific collaboration very rewarding. At the Miami Project, he seeks to integrate his clinical interests with his research. Over the last three to four years his lab group has worked on a cervical spinal cord injury model, in which hand dexterity is permanently impaired. This model may now serve as a platform to test regeneration and plasticity promoting therapies to determine if the next step, to clinical application, is warranted.