Robert W. Regenhardt, MD, PhD


Physician Investigator (Cl)
Neurosurgery, Mass General Research Institute
Instructor in Neurology
Harvard Medical School
Assistant In Neurology
Massachusetts General Hospital
Assistant In Neurology
Massachusetts General Hospital
Physician
Neurosurgery, Massachusetts General Hospital
Principal Investigator
Neurology, Massachusetts General Hospital
MD University of Florida - College of Medicine 2014
acute ischemic stroke; acute neurovascular injury; acute stroke; acute stroke imaging; acute stroke therapy; angiography digital subtraction; arteriovenous fistula; basic systems neuroscience; carotid angioplasty; carotid artery internal; carotid artery stenting; carotid-related stroke; cerebral angiography; cerebral hemorrhage; cerebral infarction; embolization therapeutic; endovascular procedures; epistaxis; hematoma subdural; hemorrhagic stroke; infusions intra-arterial; intracerebral hemorrhage; intracranial aneurysm; intracranial arteriovenous malformations; intracranial atherosclerotic stenosis; intracranial embolism and thrombosis; intracranial hemorrhages; intravenous thrombolysis; ischemic stroke; models neurological; neuroimaging; neurology; neurosurgery; stroke; stroke imaging; subarachnoid hemorrhage Robert W Regenhardt, MD, PhD is a clinical neurointerventionalist and stroke scientist at Massachusetts General Hospital. He completed college and medical school through an early acceptance program at the University of Florida in his home state. As he developed further interests in research, he pursued combined MD-PhD training. His dissertation work involved exploring neuroprotective effects of angiotensin peptides in both ischemic stroke and intracerebral hemorrhage using preclinical models. He completed neurology residency and vascular neurology fellowship at Harvard Medical School’s Massachusetts General Hospital and Brigham and Women’s Hospital. He completed a postdoctoral fellowship at the J. Philip Kistler Stroke Research Center using advanced neuroimaging analyses to understand large vessel occlusion stroke pathophysiology. He then completed neuroendovascular fellowship at Massachusetts General Hospital. His current research interests span the spectrum of translation, from understanding infarct growth despite endovascular thrombectomy to reperfusion injury after thrombectomy to improving stroke systems of care.