
Join to View Full Profile
200 1st St SWRochester, MN 55905
Phone+1 507-284-2511
Dr. Gregg is on Doximity
As a Doximity member you'll join over two million verified healthcare professionals in a private, secure network.
- Gain access to free telehealth tools, such as our “call shielding” and one-way patient texting.
- Connect with colleagues in the same hospital or clinic.
- Read the latest clinical news, personalized to your specialty.
Summary
- Dr. Nicholas Gregg is an assistant professor of neurology and biomedical engineering at the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN. His clinical practice and research is focused on neuromodulation for epilepsy.
Education & Training
- Mayo Clinic College of Medicine and Science (Rochester)Fellowship, Clinical Neurophysiology, 2017 - 2018
- McGaw Medical Center of Northwestern UniversityResidency, Neurology, 2014 - 2017
- UPMC Medical EducationInternship, Transitional Year, 2013 - 2014
- University of Pittsburgh School of MedicineClass of 2013
Certifications & Licensure
- MN State Medical License 2017 - 2025
- WI State Medical License 2024 - 2025
- IL State Medical License 2016 - 2017
- PA State Medical License 2013 - 2014
- American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology Neurology
- American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology Clinical Neurophysiology
- American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology Epilepsy
Publications & Presentations
PubMed
- A generalized epilepsy network derived from brain abnormalities and deep brain stimulation.Gong-Jun Ji, Michael D Fox, Mae Morton-Dutton, Yingru Wang, Jinmei Sun
Nature Communications. 2025-03-24 - Seizure Detection and Lateralization Using Thalamic Deep Brain Stimulator Recordings.Gloria Ortiz-Guerrero, Sihyeong Park, Keith Starnes, Brian N Lundstrom, Benjamin H Brinkmann
Journal of Clinical Neurophysiology. 2025-03-01 - 1 citationsThalamic stimulation induced changes in network connectivity and excitability in epilepsy.Nicholas M Gregg, Gabriela Ojeda Valencia, Tereza Pridalova, Harvey Huang, Vaclav Kremen
Medrxiv. 2025-02-26
Press Mentions
- Cerebral Blood Flow Reduction from Microbleeds Causes Cognitive DeficitsJuly 15th, 2015
Grant Support
- Personalized Deep Brain Stimulation for EpilepsyMAYO CLINIC ROCHESTER2025–2029
External Links
- Publicationshttps://scholar.google.com/citations?user=wbqB6OMAAAAJ&hl=en
Viewing the full profile is available to verified healthcare professionals only.
Find your profile and take control of your online presence: