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Dr. Peter Calabresi
Professor of Neurology

Director, The Johns Hopkins Multiple Sclerosis Center
Director, Division of Neuroimmunology


Peter Calabresi
CONTACT INFORMATION

The Johns Hopkins Hospital
Department of Neurology
Pathology Bldg, Room 627
600 N. Wolfe Street
Baltimore, MD 21287

410.614.1522 (p)
410.502.6736 (f)


Dr. Peter Calabresi received his undergraduate degree from Yale University and his medical degree from Brown University. He then completed an internship and residency training in internal medicine at Strong Memorial Hospital. He went on to complete a fellowship in neuroimmunology at the National Institutes of Health. 

Now an Professor of Neurology at Johns Hopkins, Dr. Calabresi serves as the Director of the Multiple Sclerosis Center, focusing on the diagnosis and management of MS. He is the principal investigator on several clinical trials and oversees research projects seeking to create new anti-inflammatory and neuroprotective therapies for MS.

One of Dr. Calabresi’s most recent accolades was being awarded a five year collaborative MS center grant from the National MS Society to study mechanisms of neurodegeneration and strategies for neuroprotection in MS. He has also received funding from the National Institutes of Health and the Wadsworth Foundation.

Dr. Calabresi is also directing a longitudinal magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) study using new ways of assessing nerve fiber and myelin integrity in the brain and spinal cord. These approaches may provide more information than conventional MRI, which is heavily weighted towards measuring inflammation.

Dr. Calabresi currently sees patients at The Johns Hopkins Outpatient Center located in Baltimore on Wednesdays.

Certifications:

  • American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology
 

Multiple Sclerosis Research

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A new study finds that low blood levels of vitamin D are associated with an increased number of brain lesions and signs of a more active disease state in people with MS.

Attacking Two Brain Disorders on Multiple Fronts
Uncover how Hopkins researchers are finding new treatments and diagnostic tools to treat multiple sclerosis and transverse myelitis.

Learn more about the relationship between multiple sclerosis and transverse myelitis at Project RESTORE.
Project RESTORE team

 

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