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Access the online appointment request form In-Office Testing See the detailed list of tests we offer Online Forms Online HIPAA-compliant forms Patient Portal Access the Patient Portal Contact Us We're Happy to hear from you! Give us a call: (732) 246-1311 (Somerset) (609) 395-7615 (Monroe) (609) 497-0300 (Princeton)
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Rutgers Health Neurology provides diagnosis, evaluation, treatment, and management for a range of neurological disorders in adults and children. We treat patients with diseases of the brain, spinal cord, nerves, or muscles. Our physicians and health care professionals emphasize excellence in disease prevention and compassionate patient care.
The Stroke Program provides 24-hour inpatient, emergency evaluation and treatment of patients with acute cerebrovascular events, including stroke and intracranial bleeding. The program has in place a multidisciplinary approach, which involves vascular neurology, diagnostic neuroradiology and endovascular surgical neuroradiology, to rapidly evaluate and appropriately treat stroke patients.
The Neuromuscular program offers state-of-the-art diagnostic facilities, including a clinical neurophysiology lab, a neuropathology lab for performance of muscle and nerve biopsies, and a radiology department for a complete array of neuroimaging. The program offers the following diagnostic tests:
The Movement Disorders Center is a major regional referral center associated with the American Parkinson's Disease Association, the Parkinson Study Group, the Dystonia Medical Research Foundation, the International Tremor Foundation and CurePSP.
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), also known as Lou Gehrig’s disease, is a progressive disease of the motor neurons (nerve cells that control the skeletal muscles). As motor neurons are affected, gradual weakness, atrophy, and paralysis of the skeletal muscles occur.
The Robert Wood Johnson Center for Multiple Sclerosis (MS) was established in 2005 at Robert Wood Johnson Medical School in conjunction with Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital, under the direction of Suhayl Dhib-Jalbut, MD, professor and chair of the Department of Neurology, and an internationally recognized leader in the area of MS research.