1095 NW 14th Terrace
Lois Pope LIFE Center
Miami, Florida 33136
Toll Free 800-996-3783
Tel: 305-243-6946
Fax: 305-243-3337
Lois Pope LIFE Center
Miami, Florida 33136
Toll Free 800-996-3783
Tel: 305-243-6946
Fax: 305-243-3337

>>Contact Information
>>Clinical Specialties
>>Research & Publications
>>Awards & Recognition
>>Personal Statement
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 |
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.
