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I studied medicine at University College London qualifying MB BS in 1997. I obtained a first class honours in Neurosciences (intercalated) in 1994. After house jobs and a basic surgical rotation in the West Midlands, I entered Neurusurgical training in London then Oxford from 2002-2009. I completed a MD degree in Oxford in the role of the periaqueductal grey area in autonomic control during this time. I became a consultant neurosurgeon in 2009. I am currently president of the British Society for Stereotactic and Functional Neurosurgery (BSSFN).
Awards Training and Qualifications
FRCS (SN)Royal College of Surgeons of England2007
Doctor of MedicineUniversity of London2005- 2007
MB BSUniversity College London1991- 1997
BSc (Hons)University College London1994
New Investigator AwardInternational Neuromodulation Society2010
7th Cluster Headache AwardInternational Annual Convention on Cluster Headache2010
Stereotactic and Functional Neurosurgery Resident AwardCongress of Neurological Surgeons (USA)2005
Gordon Holmes PrizeRoyal Society of Medicine2005
AlexGreen
Spalding Associate Professor
Consultant Neurosurgeon
Research Summary
Over the past six years I have been looking at the neurocircuitry underlying autonomic function and pain in humans undergoing Deep Brain Stimulation (DBS). There are several aims of this research. Firstly, I wish to understand both the mechanisms underlying the pathophysiology of neuropathic pain as well as why some patients get much better than results than others. Secondly, by understanding the autonomic nervous system, it may be possible to control diseases such as hypertension, respiratory and bladder disease by brain manipulation in the future. Most of the research to date has involved stimulating brain areas under different experimental conditions and also recording local field potentials to understand the underlying neurophysiology. This work has resulted in a number of publications including improvement in peak expiratory flow with stimulation, the effect of stimulation on blood pressure and baroreceptors sensitivity and novel electrical signals associated with pain states.