
Michael W. Weiner, MD, Professor in Residence in Radiology and
Biomedical Imaging, Medicine, Psychiatry, and Neurology at the
University of California, San Francisco.
4150 Clement St., Bldg. 13 114M San Francisco, CA, 94121
Dr. Michael Weiner is the former Director of the Center for Imaging of
Neurodegenerative Diseases (CIND) at the San Francisco Veterans Affairs
Medical Center. After graduating from the Johns Hopkins University in
1961, he obtained his M.D, from SUNY Upstate Medical Center in Syracuse,
New York in 1965, and he completed his internship and residency in
Medicine from Mt. Sinai Hospital in 1967. From 1967-1968, Dr. Weiner
completed a residency and clinical fellowship in Metabolism from
Yale-New Haven Medical Center. In 1970, he completed a research
fellowship in Nephrology from Yale University School of Medicine and a
research fellowship in Biochemistry from the University of Wisconsin
Institute for Enzyme Research in 1972, followed by a joint appointment
in the Department of Medicine, Renal Section from the University of
Wisconsin Institute in 1972. In 1974 he became an Assistant Professor of
Medicine (Nephrology) at Stanford University, and in 1980 he became an
Associate Professor of Medicine (Nephrology) at UCSF. In 1983, he
established the Magnetic Resonance Unit at the San Francisco VA Medical
Center, which became the Center for Imaging of Neurodegenerative
Diseases in 2000. In 1990, he became a Professor of Radiology, Medicine,
Psychiatry and Neurology at UCSF. Dr. Weiner’s research activities
involve the development and utilization of MRI and PET for investigating
and diagnosing neurodegenerative diseases. In 1980, Dr. Weiner was one
of the first to perform MRS on an intact animal, and subsequently
pursued his goal to develop MRI/S as a clinical tool. In 1988, his group
used MRS to show that the amino acid N acetyl aspartate (NAA), a marker
of healthy nerve cells, is reduced in the epileptic focus in the brain.
In 2004, Dr. Weiner's group reported that reduced NAA predicts
development of Alzheimer's disease in mildly impaired elderly subjects.
During the past 25 years he has worked to develop and optimized the use
of MRI, PET, and blood based biomarker methods to diagnose Alzheimer’s
disease and other neurodegenerative disorders. Also, Dr. Weiner’s
research focuses on monitoring effects of treatment to slow progressions
in Alzheimer’s disease, and detecting Alzheimer’s disease early in
patients who are not demented, but risk subsequent development of
dementia. He is the Principle Investigator of the Alzheimer's Disease
Neuroimaging Initiative, a 14-year national longitudinal study of over
1,500 subjects which is aimed at validating biomarkers for Alzheimer’s
disease at 60 sites across the USA and Canada for cognitive testing,
MRI, PET, and lumbar puncture. He also launched the
BrainHealthRegistry.org which is an internet based registry with the
overall goal of accelerating development of effective treatments for
brain diseases. This website registry recruits, screens, and
longitudinally monitors brain function on more than 60,000 participants.
His overall research goals are to participate in the development of
effective treatments and methods for early detection of Alzheimer's
disease and other brain disorders. Recently he has focused on developing
inexpensive, scalable, tools to identify normal elders at risk for
cognitive decline and dementia, and to provide the Brain Health Registry
software to facilitate the work of other investigators. Dr. Weiner has
mentored over 120 postdoctoral fellows, has authored more than 860
peer-reviewed research papers and 62 book chapters. He holds 19 separate
research grants. He has received numerous honors including the Middleton
Award for outstanding research in the Veterans Administration, the
Ronald and Nancy Reagan Award for research from the Alzheimer’s
Association, and the Potamkin Prize for research in Picks Disease,
Alzheimer’s disease, and other neurodegenerative disorders from the
American Association of Neurology and the American Brain Foundation.