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Dr. Ali Bydon is a professor of neurosurgery at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. His busy clinical practice focuses on degenerative disorders of the spine, spinal tumors, and complex reconstruction and restoration of the spine. Dr. Bydon is certified by the American Board of Neurological Surgeons, is a member of the American Association of Neurological Surgeons and the Congress of Neurological Surgeons.
Dr. Ali Bydon earned his medical degree from the University of Michigan School of Medicine in Ann Arbor. He completed residency training in Neurological Surgery at the Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit, where he graduated with distinction in 2006. He also completed a fellowship in Minimally Invasive Spine Surgery at Henry Ford, as well as a fellowship at Louisiana State University on the Surgical Treatment of Peripheral Nerves. Dr. Bydon then completed a one-year instructorship in Spinal Oncology and Complex Reconstructive Spinal Surgery at the Johns Hopkins Hospital.
Dr. Ali Bydon is the director of the Spinal Column Biomechanics and Surgical Outcomes Laboratory at Johns Hopkins. His research focuses on spinal biomechanics, spinal disparities and surgical outcomes. He has co-authored over 140 peer-reviewed manuscripts and numerous book chapters. Dr. Bydon co-authored the largest series in the literature evaluating the best surgical approach to spinal synovial cysts. His seminal work on outcomes after lumbar disk surgery has earned over 100 citations. The Spinal Outcomes Laboratory that he directs continues to evaluate multiple projects related to outcomes of patients with BMP, cervical myelopathy, cervical radiculopathy, ossified posterior longitudinal ligament, minimally invasive discectomy, lumbar fusion techniques and degenerative scoliosis. He is widely published on the history of spine surgery, the outcomes of patients after cervical, thoracic, and lumbar surgery, disparities in accessibility to care, and outcomes of patients with spinal tumors. His work has led to over 100 presentations at national and international scientific meetings. He has been invited to speak at meetings in Korea, Spain, Italy, Saudi Arabia, Lebanon, Syria, Panama, Kuwait, Qatar, Brazil, Bermuda, Dominican Republic and elsewhere.
Dr. Bydon is a principal investigator of several national, multi-center, prospective clinical trials evaluating long-term patient reported outcomes following spine surgery. Dr. Bydon serves as a reviewer for a dozen scientific publications, including Spine and Neurosurgery.
Dr. Bydon is an educator who has helped train over 30 practicing neurosurgeons. He is the recipient of the prestigious Richard Otenasak Faculty Teaching Award (2011) and serves as the co-director of Neurosurgical Medical Student Education. He has received Maryland’s “Favorite Physician” yearly award since 2008 and was selected by his peers as “Baltimore Magazine’s Top Doctor” for 2014. Dr. Bydon serves on the Johns Hopkins Department of Neurosurgery Residency Review Committee, and the Patient Access Committee. He was recently elected as the neurosurgical representative on the Johns Hopkins Faculty Senate. He is a “Medical Director” with Johns Hopkins Medicine International, overseeing the clinical, educational, teaching, and research activities of our Brazilian affiliate, Hospital Moinhos de Vento.
Dr. Ali Bydon earned his medical degree from the University of Michigan School of Medicine in Ann Arbor. He completed residency training in Neurological Surgery at the Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit, where he graduated with distinction in 2006. He also completed a fellowship in Minimally Invasive Spine Surgery at Henry Ford, as well as a fellowship at Louisiana State University on the Surgical Treatment of Peripheral Nerves. Dr. Bydon then completed a one-year instructorship in Spinal Oncology and Complex Reconstructive Spinal Surgery at the Johns Hopkins Hospital.
Dr. Ali Bydon is the director of the Spinal Column Biomechanics and Surgical Outcomes Laboratory at Johns Hopkins. His research focuses on spinal biomechanics, spinal disparities and surgical outcomes. He has co-authored over 140 peer-reviewed manuscripts and numerous book chapters. Dr. Bydon co-authored the largest series in the literature evaluating the best surgical approach to spinal synovial cysts. His seminal work on outcomes after lumbar disk surgery has earned over 100 citations. The Spinal Outcomes Laboratory that he directs continues to evaluate multiple projects related to outcomes of patients with BMP, cervical myelopathy, cervical radiculopathy, ossified posterior longitudinal ligament, minimally invasive discectomy, lumbar fusion techniques and degenerative scoliosis. He is widely published on the history of spine surgery, the outcomes of patients after cervical, thoracic, and lumbar surgery, disparities in accessibility to care, and outcomes of patients with spinal tumors. His work has led to over 100 presentations at national and international scientific meetings. He has been invited to speak at meetings in Korea, Spain, Italy, Saudi Arabia, Lebanon, Syria, Panama, Kuwait, Qatar, Brazil, Bermuda, Dominican Republic and elsewhere.
Dr. Bydon is a principal investigator of several national, multi-center, prospective clinical trials evaluating long-term patient reported outcomes following spine surgery. Dr. Bydon serves as a reviewer for a dozen scientific publications, including Spine and Neurosurgery.
Dr. Bydon is an educator who has helped train over 30 practicing neurosurgeons. He is the recipient of the prestigious Richard Otenasak Faculty Teaching Award (2011) and serves as the co-director of Neurosurgical Medical Student Education. He has received Maryland’s “Favorite Physician” yearly award since 2008 and was selected by his peers as “Baltimore Magazine’s Top Doctor” for 2014. Dr. Bydon serves on the Johns Hopkins Department of Neurosurgery Residency Review Committee, and the Patient Access Committee. He was recently elected as the neurosurgical representative on the Johns Hopkins Faculty Senate. He is a “Medical Director” with Johns Hopkins Medicine International, overseeing the clinical, educational, teaching, and research activities of our Brazilian affiliate, Hospital Moinhos de Vento.
研究兴趣
论文共 343 篇作者统计合作学者相似作者
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Abdel-Hameed Al-Mistarehi,Megan Parker,Yuanxuan Xia, Alireza Hasanzadeh, Melanie Alfonzo Horowitz,Divyaansh Raj, Pritika Papali, A Daniel Davidar,Kristin J Redmond,Chetan Bettegowda,Timothy Witham,Ali Bydon,Nicholas Theodore,Daniel Lubelski
World neurosurgery (2024): e920-e930
Albert Antar,Abdel-Hameed Al-Mistarehi, Pritika Papali,Yuanxuan Xia,Carly Weber-Levine,Kelly Jiang, Benjamin Mendelson, Shreya Sriram, Melanie Alfonzo Horowitz, Sang-Hun Lee,Kristin Redmond,Ali Bydon,Nicholas Theodore,Daniel Lubelski
The Spine Journalno. 9 (2024): S162-S163
Kristin Redmond,Tej D Azad,Ali Bydon,Timothy F. Witham,Daniel Lubelski,Christian Meyer,Jean-Paul Wolinsky,Yuanxuan Xia, Pritika Papali,Abdel-Hameed Al-Mistarehi,Landon Hansen, Ali Ahmed,Majid Khan,Chetan Bettegowda,Debraj Mukherjee,Nicholas Theodore,Ziya L. Gokaslan, Sheng-fu Larry Lo,Daniel M. Sciubba,Sang-Hun Lee
The Spine Journalno. 9 (2024): S24-S25
Journal of neurosurgery. Case lessonsno. 21 (2024)
N. Vuppala,M.C. LeCompte,A. Bydon,K. Kebaish,N. Theodore, B. Wu, M. Khan, L.R. Kleinberg, S.H. Lee,D. Lubelski,K.J. Redmond
International Journal of Radiation OncologyBiologyPhysicsno. 2 (2024)
Journal of neurosurgery. Case lessonsno. 3 (2024)
JBJS case connectorno. 3 (2024)
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Albert Antar,Abdel-Hameed Al-Mistarehi, Pritika Papali,Yuanxuan Xia,Carly Weber-Levine,Kelly Jiang, Benjamin Mendelson, Shreya Sriram, Melanie Alfonzo Horowitz, Sang-Hun Lee,Kristin Redmond,Ali Bydon,Nicholas Theodore,Daniel Lubelski
The Spine Journalno. 9 (2024): S162
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#Papers: 344
#Citation: 8211
H-Index: 50
G-Index: 76
Sociability: 7
Diversity: 3
Activity: 54
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