SJH&MC Parkinson's Clinic Physicians
Raymond T. Bauer, MD
Hospital Privileges: St. John Hospital and Medical Center
Dr. Bauer is board certified in physical medicine and rehabilitation and currently serves at Medical Staff President and Medical Director of Rehab Services at St. John North Shores Hospital. He also is on the Board of Directors of the Michigan Parkinson?s Foundation. Dr. Bauer attended Wayne State University School of Medicine and completed his training at Sinai Hospital, where he served as Chief Resident, and at St. John Hospital and Medical Center. He has conducted research in Parkinson?s Disease and oncology in addition to his work as a specialist in EMG testing, sports medicine and rehabilitation medicine. Dr. Bauer's sub-specialties and clinical interests include: Botox injections for spasticity, amputation patients, Parkinson's disease, stroke, carpal tunnel syndrome, Guillain Barre, and Multiple Sclerosis, as well as non-surgical management of back and neck pain.
Paul A. Cullis, MD
Hospital Privileges: Providence Hospital, Providence Park Hospital, St. John Hospital and Medical Center, St. John Macomb-Oakland Hospital
Dr. Cullis, who is certified in neurology and neurorehabilitation, is Section Chief of Neurology at St. John Hospital and Medical Center, and Clinical Associate Professor of Neurology at Wayne State University School of Medicine. He has special training and expertise in movement disorders, such as dystonia and Parkinson's disease, general neurology, and sleep disorders. Dr. Cullis was the first physician in Michigan to inject botulinum toxin into neck muscles for spasmodic torticollis and the first physician in the United States to treat patients with botulinum toxin B (Myobloc).
Dr. Cullis is the chairman of the Professional Advisory Board of the Michigan Parkinson's Foundation and former medical director of the National Spasmodic Torticollis Association. Dr. Cullis was named by his peers as one of metro Detroit's top neurologists in Hour Detroit magazine's 2007 and 2008 "Top Docs" survey.










