
Keith L. Black, MD serves as Chairman of the
Department of Neurosurgery and Director of the Maxine Dunitz
Neurosurgical Institute at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center. An
internationally renowned neurosurgeon and scientist, Dr. Black
joined Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in July 1997 and was awarded
the Ruth and Lawrence Harvey Chair in Neurosciences in November
of that year.
Prior to joining Cedars-Sinai, Dr. Black served on the
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) faculty for 10
years where he was a Professor of Neurosurgery. In 1992 he was
awarded the Ruth and Raymond Stotter Chair in the Department of
Surgery and was Head of the UCLA Comprehensive Brain Tumor
Program.
Dr. Black pioneered research on designing ways to open the
blood-brain barrier, enabling chemotherapeutic drugs to be
delivered directly into the tumor. His work in this field
received the Jacob Javits award from the National Advisory
Neurological Disorders and Stroke Council of the National
Institutes of Health in June 2000. Dr. Black, along with
patients undergoing the first clinical trials of the drug
RMP-7, was profiled in 1996 on the PBS program, The New
Explorers, in an episode called "Outsmarting the Brain".
Dr. Black's other groundbreaking research has focused on
developing a vaccine to enhance the body's immune response to
brain tumors, use of gene arrays to develop molecular profiles
of tumors, the use of optical technology for brain mapping, and
the use of focused microwave energy to noninvasively destroy
brain tumors. He was featured on the cover of Time magazine in
the Fall 1997 special edition "Heroes of Medicine".
Dr. Black serves on the editorial boards of the Neurological
Research, Gene Therapy and Molecular Biology, Neurosurgery
Quarterly and Frontiers In Bioscience. He was on the National
Institutes of Health's Board of Scientific Counselors for
Neurological Disorders and Stroke and was appointed to the
National Advisory Neurological Disorders and Stroke Council of
the National Institutes of Health from 2000 to 2004.
He was also selected as a committee member of the California
Institute for Regenerative Medicine Independent Citizens
Oversight Committee from 2004-2006. He is also a member of
numerous professional societies, including the American
Association of Neurological Surgeons, Neurosurgical Society of
America and the Academy of Neurological Surgery. He also is a
Founding Member of the North American Skull Base Society.
Dr. Black has a unique ability to combine cutting-edge
research and an extremely busy surgical practice. Since 1987,
he has performed more than 5,000 operations for resection of
brain tumors.
Dr. Black has had a keen interest in science since
childhood. At age 17, he published his first scientific paper,
which earned a Westinghouse Science Award. He completed an
accelerated college program at the University of Michigan and
earned both his undergraduate and medical degrees in six years.
He completed his internship in general surgery and residency in
neurological surgery at the University of Michigan Medical
Center in Ann Arbor.
Source:
http://www.pinnaclecare.com/finding/mab/physicians/phcphysicianbio.2005-07-19.2858828016/phcphysicianbio_view
|