Stephen George Waxman MD, PhD
Bridget Marie Flaherty Professor of Neurology and Professor of Neurobiology and of Pharmacology; Director, Center for Neuroscience and Regeneration Research
Biographical Info

Stephen G. Waxman, MD, PhD:
Steve Waxman exemplifies the bridge between basic research and
clinical medicine. He is the Bridget Marie Flaherty Professor of Neurology, Neurobiology,
and Pharmacology at Yale
University. He served as Chairman of Neurology at Yale
from 1986 until 2009. He founded the
Neuroscience and Regeneration
Research Center
at Yale in 1986, and is its Director. Dr. Waxman is also Visiting Professor at
University College London and the Institute
of Neurology, London.
Dr. Waxman received his BA from Harvard, and his MD and PhD degrees from Albert Einstein College of Medicine. He
held faculty appointments at Harvard Medical School, MIT,
and Stanford University, prior to moving to Yale. Dr. Waxman has received international recognition
for his research, which uses tools from the “genomic revolution” to find new
therapies that will promote recovery of function after injury to the brain,
spinal cord, and peripheral nerves.
Dr. Waxman’s research has defined
the ion channel architecture of myelinated axons, and demonstrated its
importance for conduction in normal axons and for conduction failure after
demyelination (Science, 1985). He demonstrated increased expression of
sodium channels in demyelinated axons (Science, 1982), identified the sodium
channel isoforms responsible for this remarkable neuronal plasticity which
supports remission in multiple sclerosis (PNAS, 2004), and delineated the roles of
sodium channels in axonal degeneration (PNAS, 1993, 2004). He has also made pivotal discoveries that
explain pain after nerve injury. Most recently, in a keystone leap from laboratory to
humans, Waxman carried out molecule-to-man studies combining molecular
genetics, molecular biology, and biophysics to demonstrate the contribution of
ion channels to human pain (Trends in Molec. Med. 2005; PNAS,
2006).
Dr.
Waxman has published more than 600 scientific papers. He has as edited nine books, and is the
author of Spinal Cord Compression
and of Clinical Neuroanatomy, which has been translated into eight
languages. He has served on the
editorial boards of many journals including Brain, Annals of Neurology, Trends in Neurosciences, Nature Clinical Neurology, and Trends
in Molecular Medicine,
and he serves as Editor of The
Journal of Physiology and as Editor-in-Chief of Neuroscience Letters. Dr.
Waxman has trained more than one hundred and fifty academic neurologists and
neuroscientists who work at institutions around the world.
A member of the Institute of Medicine of the
National Academy of Sciences, Dr. Waxman has served on numerous advisory boards
and councils, including the Board of Scientific Counselors of the NINDS. His
many awards include the Tuve Award from
NIH, the Distinguished Alumnus Award from Albert Einstein College of Medicine, and the Dystel Prize and Wartenberg Award
from the American
Academy of Neurology. Dr.
Waxman was recently honored at the U.S. Capitol with the Middleton
Award, the highest honor of the Veterans Administration, and in Great Britain
with The Physiological Society’s Annual Prize, an honor that he shares with
Nobel Prize laureates Andrew Huxley, John Eccles, and Alan Hodgkin.
International Activity
- (2005)
Editor, Journal of Physiology - (1998)
Visiting Professor of Anatomy, Biology, and Clinical Neurology, University College London
Education & Training
- Ph.D.
- Albert Einstein College (1970)
- M.D.
- Albert Einstein College (1972)
- Resident
- Boston City Hospital, Neurology (1972 - 1975)
- Clinical Fellow
- Harvard Medical School, Clinical Neurology (1972 - 1975)
- Postdoctoral Fellow
- MIT, Biology and Electrical Engineering (1974 - 1975)
Honors & Recognition
- Established Investigator, National Multiple Sclerosis Society
National MS Society (1987) - Trygve Tuve Memorial Award for Outstanding Contributions in the Biomedical Sciences, NIH
NIH (1973) - Research Career Development Award, NINCDS
NIH (1976) - Distinguished Alumnus Award, Albert Einstein College of Medicine
Albert Einstein Coll. of Med. (1991) - Fellow, Royal Society of Medicine
Royal Society of Medicine, London (1991) - Member, Dana Alliance for Brain Initiatives
(1993) - Listed in The Best Doctors in America
(1994) - Elected to Institute of Medicine, National Academy of Sciences
(1996) - Wartenberg Award, American Academy of Neurology
(1999) - Honorary Senior Fellow, Institute of Neurology, London
(1999) - Dystel Prize for Research on Multiple Sclerosis, awarded jointly by the American Academy of Neurology and the Natl MS Society
(2000) - Reingold Award, National Multiple Sclerosis Society
(2004) - Honorary Member, Association of British Neurologists
(2005) - W.I. McDonald Award, British Multiple Sclerosis Society
(2009) - William S Middleton Award (highest scientific honor of the Dept of Veterans Affairs, presented at Ceremonies at the U.S. Capitol).
(2009) - Annual Review Prize, The Physiological Society (Premier Award of the Society previous awardees include J.C. Eccles, A.F. Huxley, A.L. Hodgkin)
(2009)


