Jason Huang

Dr. Jason Huang, M.D., FAANS, FACS is a Chinese-born American neurosurgeon at Baylor Scott & White Health in Temple, TX.[1] He is known for both clinical and research work in nervous system injury and repair, including traumatic brain injury, spinal trauma, and peripheral nerve injuries. He is the recipient of "U.S. News Top Docs".[2]

Jason Huang
Born
NationalityUnited States of America
Alma materAmherst College, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
AwardsAO Spine Young Investigator Award; Army Commendation Medal; NREF Young Investigator's Award (AANS); Charles Elsberg Award (NYAM); David G. Kline Award (AANS); Codman Award (AANS); Super Doctor (Texas Monthly)
Scientific career
FieldsTrauma Neurosurgery, Spine, Peripheral Nerve Injury
InstitutionsBaylor Scott & White Health, Temple, TX, USA

Dr. Huang graduated magna cum laude from Amherst College, and received his medical degree from Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. Following that, he finished neurosurgery residency training at University of Pennsylvania. During his residency training, he also completed his Neurotrauma & Critical Care and Complex Spine fellowships at University of Pennsylvania.

Dr. Huang was an Army Reserve neurosurgeon and was deployed to Balad Theater Hospital in Iraq in 2008 in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom.[3][4][5] He received an Army Commendation Medal and was honorably discharged at the rank of lieutenant colonel in 2012.

After serving as an attending neurosurgeon at Strong Memorial Hospital and Highland Hospital in Rochester, NY for 7 years, in 2014, Dr. Huang joined the faculty at Baylor Scott & White Health to become the director of the neuroscience institute and chairman of the neurosurgery department. He was appointed Professor of Surgery at Texas A&M University College of Medicine. He also successfully built up an ACGME-accredited residency training program, for which he serves as the program director.

Positions

  • Reviewer at several NIH Study Sections
  • Reviewer at Department of Defense
  • Reviewer at Department of Veteran Affairs Research Grants
  • Board member of New York State Spinal Cord Injury Research Board (2007-2014)
  • Advisory Board of the journal Spine
  • Guest editor on Traumatic Brain Injury for Neurological Research
  • Reviewer for Neurosurgery, Neurology, Spine, and The Science of Nature, etc.

Research

Dr. Huang's main research interest lies in the field of nervous system injury and repair. His lab has active extramural research funding including a prestigious R01 award from the National Institutes of Health.[6][7]

Recent Publications

  • Wang F., Wang X., Shapiro L.A., Cotrina, M.L., Liu, W., Wang, E.W., Gu, S., Wang, W., He, X., Nedergaard, M., Huang, J.H.: NKCC1 up-regulation Contributes to Early Post-traumatic Seizures and Increased Post-traumatic Seizure Susceptibility. Brain Struct. Funct. Sep 1, 2016 [Epub ahead of print] PMID 27586142.
  • Sone, J.Y., Kondziolka D., Huang, J.H., Samadani, U.: Helmet Efficacy against Concussion and Traumatic Brain Injury: A Literature Review, Journal of Neurosurgery, May 27:1-14, 2016, [Epub ahead of print]. PMID 27231972.
  • Dayawansa, S. Zhang, J., Tharakan, B., Huang, J.H.: Functional, electrophysiological recoveries of rats with sciatic nerve lesions following transplantation of elongated DRG cells, Neurological Research, 2016, March 28:1-6. [Epub ahead of print]. PMID 27078705.
  • Song, F., Hou Y., Sun G., Chen X., Xu, B., Huang, J.H., Zhang, J.: In vivo Visualization of the Facial Nerve in Acoustic Neuroma using Diffusion Tensor Imaging-Based Fiber Tracking, Journal of Neurosurgery, Jan 1:1-8, 2016 [Epub ahead of print]. PMID 26722859.
  • Samadani U., Farooq S., Ritlop, R., Warren, F., Reyes, M., Lamm, E., Alex, A., Nehrbass, E., Kolecki, R., Jureller, M., Schneider, J., Chen, A., Shi, C., Mendhiratta N., Huang, J.H., Qian, M., Kwak, R., Mikheev, A., Rusinek, H., George, A., Fergus, R., Kondziolka, D., Huang, P.P., Smith, R.T.: Detection of Third and Sixth Cranial Nerve Palsies with a Novel Method of Eye Tracking While Watching a Short Film Clip, Journal of Neurosurgery, 122(3): 707-720, March 2015. PMID 25495739.
  • Lynch, G., Nieto, K., Puthenveettil, S., Reyes, M., Jureller, M., Huang, J.H., Grady, M.S., Harris, O.A., Ganju, A., Germano, I., Pilitsis, J., Benzil, D. Abosch A., and Samadani, U.: Attrition Rates in Neurosurgery Residency: Analysis of 1361 Consecutive Residents Matched from 1990 to 1999, Journal of Neurosurgery, 122(2): 240-249, Feb 2015. PMID 25415065.
  • Tong, J., Ren, Y., Wang, X., Dimopoulos V.G., Kesler, H.N., Liu, W., Nedergaard, M., Huang, J.H.: Assessment of NgR1 Function in vivo after Spinal Cord Injury, Neurosurgery, 2014 July; 75(1):51-60. PMID 24594926.
  • Plog, B.A., Pierre C.A., Srinivasan V., Srinivasan, K., Petraglia, A.L., Huang, J.H.: Neurologic Injury in Snowmobiling, Surgical Neurology International, 5:87, June 6, 2014. PMID 25024887.
  • Srinivasan V., Pierre C., Plog, B., Srinivasan, K., Petraglia, A.L., Huang, J.H.: Straight from the Horse’s Mouth: Neurological Injury in Equestrian Sports, Neurological Research, 36(10): 873-877, 2014. PMID 24725290.
  • Dayawansa, S., Wang, EW, Liu, W., Markman, JD, Gelbard, HA, Huang, J.H.: Allotransplanted DRG Neurons or Schwann Cells Affect Functional Recovery in a Rodent Model of Sciatic Nerve Injury. Neurological Research, 36(11):1020-1027, Nov 2014. PMID 24836462.

Patents

Dr. Huang holds six U.S. patents.

gollark: Nice of them to include heatsinks.
gollark: Everyone knows that bad things are permitted to exist for a maximum of a year.
gollark: Also also, computer systems are fairly close to human performance on some tasks (I think image recognition and processing, and nowadays some text generation), and do much better on some others (chess, go, etc.).
gollark: Also, human brains are basically just special... biological things, with a bunch more processing power (in some ways) than current computers.
gollark: You said it "is not", but computers actually *do* exist as far as I can tell, though.

References

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