Christopher Neal Parkhurst, M.D., Ph.D.
Christopher Neal Parkhurst, M.D., Ph.D.
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About Christopher Neal Parkhurst, M.D., Ph.D.
Advances in medical knowledge and technology over the past decades have radically changed the way that we care for critically ill patients. The conditions that we most often treat in our ICUs such as sepsis and ARDS now often end with patients returning home. Despite these improvements in immediate outcomes, patients returning home from the ICU often face new physical, mood, and cognitive changes/impairments collectively known as post-ICU syndrome (PICS). As a physician-scientist in the Weill Cornell Medicine Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, it is my privilege to work with patients and their families both during acute critical illness in our ICUs and afterwards in our post-ICU clinic as well as to conduct basic and translational research into PICS in order to better understand and ultimately treat this syndrome.
Dr. Parkhurst earned his undergraduate degree in neurobiology and behavior from Cornell University before joining the medical scientist training program at the New York University School of Medicine, jointly earning his MD and PhD degrees. During this time his research focused on understanding the interaction between the immune and central nervous systems, including the impact of inflammation on brain function. After his graduate training Dr. Parkhurst completed his residency in internal medicine and fellowship in pulmonary and critical care medicine at the New York-Presbyterian Hospital where he served as chief fellow. He is currently an attending physician and postdoctoral research fellow at Weill Cornell Medicine and New York-Presbyterian Hospital. His current research efforts focus on understanding the mechanisms by which critical illness generates persistent physical and cognitive dysfunction.
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M.D.New York University School of Medicine2015
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Ph.D.New York University2013
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B.S.Cornell University2002
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Assistant Attending PhysicianNewYork-Presbyterian Hospital
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Instructor in MedicineWeill Cornell Medical College, Cornell University
External Relationships
Relationships and collaborations with for-profit and not-for profit organizations are of vital importance to our faculty because these exchanges of scientific information foster innovation. As experts in their fields, WCM physicians and scientists are sought after by many organizations to consult and educate. WCM and its faculty make this information available to the public, thus creating a transparent environment.
No External Relationships Reported