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Interesting People Topics:

Engineering :
- Kim Bigelow - Engineering Professor

Brain Surgery :
- Atom Sarkar - Neurosurgeon
- David Moxness - Procedure Solutions Specialist

Crash Scene:
- Alexia Fountain - Mechanical Engineering Student
- Ed Conkel – Emergency Medical Technician
- Trooper Fred J. Cook – Crash Scene Reconstruction Unit
-
Matthew A. Wolfe – Highway Safety Specialist

Compound Machines:
- Eric Westervelt - Electrical Engineer, Control Theory Specialist
- Ray Morrow– Exhibit Engineer
- Teresa Brusadin
– Welding Engineer

Weather:
- Rick Toracinta – Research Associate, Polar Meteorology Group
- Ben Gelber - On-air Meteorologist

Hip Surgery:
- Wilma Gillis - Chief Clinical Anesthetist
- John Heiner - Professor of Orthopedic Surgery
- Pat Johnson - Medical Assistant
- Shawn Knock - Surgical Technician
- Karen Myung - Orthopedic Surgery Resident

- Pat Schubert - R.N. Team Leader, Orthopedics
- Richard Illgen - Orthopedic Surgeon
- Carolyn Steinhorst - Nurse Clinician
- Eric Stormoen - Unit Coordinator, Orthopedics
- Szymon Wozniczka - Physical Therapist


Knee Surgery:
- Leanne Turner – Orthopedic Prosthetic Engineer
- Dr. Joel Politi - Orthopedic Surgeon
- Jan Augenstein - Physician Assistant
- Ed Lafollette - Registered Nurse
- Jeremy Daughtery - Clinical Manager Neurosurgery and Orthopedics


 

Atom Sarkar
Neurosurgeon

Education

  • 2005 - Chief Resident, Neurosurgery, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN.
  • 2002-2004 - Postdoctoral fellowship, Columbia University, New York, NY.
  • 1998-2005 - Neurosurgery residency, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN.
  • 1990-1998 - M.D./Ph.D. student, Univ. of Miami School of Medicine, Miami, FL.
    Ph.D., Physiology and Biophysics, Molecular Neuroscience: “Cloning and Characterization of a Calcitonin Receptor from the Guinea Pig Brain”
  • B.S. Biology, Brown University, Providence, RI.

I have two jobs. I am a neurosurgeon and a basic science researcher. As a neurosurgeon I treat and deal with problems that afflict the brain and spine. As a researcher I focus on nanotechnology and how force affects single molecules in normal and diseased states.

There are no typical days. All are hectic and fulfilling. It is exciting to know that I interact with the human nervous system that has been evolving for 500 million years. In any given day I see patients with brain tumors to brain hemorrhages to spinal cord injuries.  I wanted to be a neurosurgeon because I felt it was the most challenging vocation.

The best and worst part of my job is that the disease processes that I deal with often leave people on the brink of life, death, or paralyses. The tolerance is high and the demands are challenging.

Change has come about through technology and the way we are using more and more minimally invasive procedures to obtain the same outcomes.

 

 
   

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