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The Department of Neurosurgery welcomes ​Kristopher T. Kahle, M.D., Ph.D.

September 03, 2015

Kristopher T. Kahle, M.D., Ph.D., is an Assistant Professor of Neurosurgery and Pediatrics at Yale School of Medicine, and Director of Neonatal and Congenital Anomaly Neurosurgery in the Division of Pediatric Neurosurgery. He completed his MD/PhD at the Yale School of Medicine under the mentorship of Richard Lifton, and neurosurgical residency at the Massachusetts General Hospital. After residency, Dr. Kahle completed his pediatric neurosurgery fellowship at Boston Children’s Hospital and was Instructor at Harvard Medical School. Dr. Kahle performed a postdoctoral research fellowship with Stephen Elledge and David Clapham at Harvard University. Dr. Kahle’s primary clinical practice includes disorders of neurodevelopment (hydrocephalus, arachnoid cysts, congenital vascular malformations, chiari malformations, spina bifida, and tethered spinal cord) and tumors of the pediatric brain and spinal cord. Dr. Kahle is trained in neuroendoscopy, including third ventriculostomy and choroid plexus coagulation. Dr. Kahle is an attending physician at Yale-New Haven Hospital and the Yale-New Haven Children’s Hospital, as well as an attending physician at the Veteran’s Affairs (VA) Medical Center in West Haven, CT. Dr. Kahle’s research is devoted to identifying the genes and pathways that regulate ionic plasticity in the developing nervous system, and how genetically-encoded or maladaptive changes in these processes contribute to the cellular, circuit, and behavioral abnormalities in neurodevelopmental disorders and in the traumatized brain. The goal of his work is to translate advances in basic science into novel therapeutic strategies for neurosurgical diseases that feature deranged ion and water homeostasis, such as hydrocephalus and cerebral edema.