The Stanford IONM Team

Faculty

Jaime R. López, MD
Director, Intraoperative Neurophysiologic Monitoring Program

My clinical interests are in the areas of Intraoperative Neurophysiologic Monitoring (IONM), clinical neurophysiology, electromyopgraphy and in the use of botulinum toxins in the treatment of neurologic disorders. Our IOM group's research is in the development of new and innovative techniques for monitoring the nervous system during surgical and endovascular procedures and how these alter surgical management and patient outcomes. I am also active in formulating national IOM practice guidelines.


S. Charles Cho, MD

Dr. Cho’s Clinical research is focused on peripheral nerve and muscle disorders and the prevention of cerebrovascular disesase in the intraoperative setting. His ongoing clincial studies include treatments for Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS), Inflammatory Demyelinating Neuropathy and HIV neuropathic pain.


Scheherazade Le, MD

Dr. Le's clinical research is focused on waveform analysis of motor evoked potentials and the prevention of spinal motor deficits in the intraoperative setting. She is also interested in developing techniques to obtain motor evoked potentials under partial paralysis in the endovascular suite. She is involved with trainee education and has clinical interests in epilepsy, electroencephalography and general neurology.


Leslie H. Lee, MD

Dr. Lee’s academic interests include clinical neurophysiology, intraoperative neurophysiologic monitoring (IONM), general neurology, stroke, and headache disorders. Ongoing research projects include the study of critical IONM changes that predict reversible cortical and subcortical ischemia, new methodologies to identify neural structures at risk perioperatively and optimize patient outcomes, and clinical trials involving emerging therapies in the treatment of multiple sclerosis.


Viet Nguyen, MD

Dr. Nguyen’s practice leverages neurophysiology to improve the care of neurologic patients, including the Intraoperative Neurophysiologic Monitoring service, the Stanford Concussion Clinic, and the Spasticity Clinic, which treats patients with spastic paralysis (i.e. from cerebral palsy, stroke, multiple sclerosis, etc.), including the use of botulinum toxin injections.  Ongoing research projects include finding correlations between intraoperative neurophysiologic data and post-operative outcomes, validation of new neuromonitoring techniques, and clinical trials for emerging multiple sclerosis therapies.  He presents at research forums and educational courses at professional society meetings nationally and internationally.  He runs the Introduction to Neurology Seminar (NENS206) at the medical school, is a mentor for the Stanford Immersion in Medicine Series (SIMS), and is a preceptor for the Stanford Institutes of Medicine Summer Research Program (SIMR).


IONM Fellow

Orhan Bican, MD

Dr. Bican was born and raised in Turkey, where he also attended Istanbul University School of Medicine and graduated in 2007. He started his Neurology residency training at Louisiana State University and achieved the top score on the neurology in-training examination in his first year. He completed his residency training at Drexel University, where he also served as chief resident in his senior year and received a teaching award for his contribution to trainee education. He subsequently completed a fellowship training in Clinical Neurophysiology (EMG and EEG) at Drexel University. Dr. Bican is interested in the application of neurophysiologic principles to the intraoperative setting and is delighted to join the Intraoperative Neurophysiologic Monitoring Fellowship program at Stanford University.

Technologists

Mark Burdelle, Manager


Eric Jones


Jacqueline Varga

Jerry Dahm


Harinder Kaur

Sarita Gupta


Carmen Malvestio

Additional Support

JoAnn Ceranski Neurodiagnostic Technologist
Chantelle Enriquez Administrative Assistant
Ruth Jackson Administrative Assistant
Christine Hopkins Fellowship Coordinator