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Richard Schmidt, MD, PhD, specializes in neurosurgery and is an associate professor
in the Department of Neurosurgery at the University of Utah School of Medicine. His practice includes
the multidisciplinary management of complex tumors of the skull base and brain such as meningiomas.
He is also a specialist in cerebrovascular brain surgery, which involves treatment of brain aneurysms
and vascular malformations. This gives him the surgical expertise necessary for operations involving
tumors of the skull base, as they frequently involve the major blood vessels of the brain.
A multidisciplinary management approach is especially important for complex tumors of the skull
base or brain. Depending upon individual circumstances, the treatment of such a tumor may require, in
addition to a neurosurgeon, the collaborative efforts of otolaryngologists, interventional
neuroradiologists, neuropsychologists, or radiation oncologists. Technologies which are important in
the management of complex tumors include computer-based image guided surgery, functional brain
imaging, intraoperative functional mapping, tumor embolization, intraoperative electrophysiology, and
endoscopic surgery. Schmidt and the multidisciplinary management team are routinely able to provide
any combination of these technologies, as appropriate, in order to achieve the best outcome.
Schmidt received his undergraduate degree from Brown University and his PhD and MD degrees at the
University of Iowa. He trained in neurosurgery at the University of Washington. He has done
postgraduate research and clinical training at the University of Lund in Sweden and at Atkinson
Morley's Hospital in London, England. He has been a member of the faculty at the University of Utah
since 1993. He is board certified in neurological surgery and is a member of the subspecialty
sections on cerebrovascular surgery and trauma and critical care. He has participated in numerous
research activities around the world and is extensively published.
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