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Helen Bronte-Stewart, MD, MS

Helen Bronte-Stewart, MD, MS

Professor - University Medical Line, Neurology & Neurological Sciences
Professor - University Medical Line (By courtesy), Neurosurgery
Member, Bio-X
Member, Wu Tsai Human Performance Alliance
Member, Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute
Fellowship: UCSF Medical Center (1992) CA
Medical Education: Perelman School of Medicine University of Pennsylvania (1984) PA
Residency: Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania (1988) PA
Internship: Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania (1985) PA
Board Certification: American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology, Neurology (1991)
BA, University of York, England, Mathematics and physics
MSE, University of Pennsylvania, Bioengineering
MD, University of Pennsylvania, Medicine
Affiliation:
Committee:
Dr. Helen Bronte-Stewart is the John E Cahill Family Professor in the department of Neurology and Neurological Sciences. She is a neurologist, neurophysiologist and movement disorders specialist, who has used her training in mathematics and physics, bioengineering, neurology, movement disorders, and single unit electrophysiology in primates to develop a rigorous translational program in motor control research in human subjects with movement disorders. Dr. Bronte-Stewart is the Director of the Human Motor Control and Neuromodulation Laboratory, where she has developed computerized, quantitative measurements of motor behavior, which are being implemented in a wide range of Movement Disorders. She is also the Co-Director of the Stanford Balance Center, Her research investigates the brain’s contribution to abnormal movement in human subjects, using synchronous brain recordings and quantitative kinematics, and how these are modulated with different frequencies and patterns of neurostimulation. Dr. Bronte-Stewart’s team was the first in the United States to implant a sensing neurostimulator, from which they can record brain signals directly, and use the patient’s own neural activity to drive the first closed loop neurostimulation studies in Parkinson’s disease. This work has led to her team receiving a BRAIN Initiative grant to perform the first closed loop deep brain stimulation studies for gait impairment and freezing of gait in Parkinson’s disease. She is the Global Lead Investigator for the first pivotal international multicenter trial of adaptive DBS in Parkinson’s disease – the ADAPT-PD trial.