Providers MS Center

About the Multiple Sclerosis Center

The Weill Cornell Medicine Multiple Sclerosis Center is dedicated to improving the lives of people living with MS through comprehensive, personalized care. We bring together leading clinicians and researchers to improve outcomes today while advancing treatments for tomorrow.

Our mission is to:

  • Provide multidisciplinary care that addresses the medical, cognitive, emotional, and rehabilitative needs of patients and families.
  • Limit disability and restore function through innovative diagnostics, therapies, and clinical trials.
  • Advance clinical, translational, and basic research to identify new multiple sclerosis treatments and regenerative strategies.
  • Translate discovery into real-world impact through collaboration across neurology, imaging, immunology, and genetics.


What We Offer


Personalized, Multidisciplinary Care

Our neurologists develop individualized treatment plans using advanced diagnostic tools and the most current therapies. Care may include disease-modifying treatments, symptom management, and coordinated rehabilitation services tailored to each patient’s needs.

Nurses provide education and ongoing support related to medications, symptom management, and daily living with MS. Clinical social workers offer individualized guidance and help patients and families navigate emotional, cognitive, and practical challenges associated with the disease.

Specialty Services

Patients benefit from coordinated care with specialists in neuro-ophthalmology, rehabilitative medicine, urology, neuropsychology, neuroradiology, and neurosurgery. Physical and cognitive rehabilitation services are integrated into care to support function, independence, and quality of life.

Research and Clinical Trials

Research is a core mission of the MS Center. Our clinical, translational, and basic science programs focus on limiting disability, restoring function, and advancing new treatments for multiple sclerosis. Patients may have opportunities to participate in clinical trials evaluating novel therapies designed to slow disease progression and promote repair.

Our research spans neuroscience, immunology, genetics, and advanced imaging, including efforts to better visualize axons and myelin and to develop regenerative strategies for MS.



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The nurse is so great. She has no problem finding a vein or getting blood. She’s so sweet and happy all the time. She’s fun to talk to. Love her!

Patricia
MS

MS Journey

I was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis when I was 26 years old, though I knew something was wrong for months. I couldn’t stay awake. I was confused. I had memory loss, numb feet, blurry vision, and sometimes saw double. But because I was overweight, almost every doctor I saw told me to lose weight, as if that would solve everything. They weren’t entirely wrong—I did need to lose weight—but weight loss wasn’t going to stop the flare that was happening in my spine. I was 25 when the symptoms...
Your

Your gut microbiome, your health

The human gut microbiome comprises approximately 100 trillion microbes representing the most complicated interaction between microbiota and the human body.  Collectively, these microbes inhabiting your gut are termed symbionts, which means “fellow travelers” or species different from us that live within us (1).  Amongst these symbionts are mutualists, commensals, and pathogens, that is, microbes that are helpful and some that are harmful (1).  Due to intense selection pressure by the host (...

Events

Oct 24

Pathways to Wellness: Building Resilience & Bridging Neural Networks

Oct 24 to 1:00pm
Friday, October 24 11 AM - 1 PM Location: Weill Greenberg Center, 1305 York Ave, Floor 2 Conference Room A Presented by Jen Smrtka Board-...

Oct 22

Neurology Grand Rounds

Oct 22 to 9:30am
Lecture Topic: "Diagnosis and Management of Multiple Sclerosis" Aaron Miller M.D. Professor of Neurology Icahn School of Medicine at Mt. Sinai