Bryan Hicks, MD
Associates In Dermatology
7932 W Sand Lake Rd STE 202, Orlando, FL 32819
Photos and Videos
- HoursCLOSED NOW
- Regular Hours:
Wed - Phone:
Main - 352-237-2090
- Address:
- 3371 Wedgewood Ln The Villages, FL 32162
- Link:
- Categories
- Physicians & Surgeons, Dermatology, Physicians & Surgeons, Skin Care
- Payment Options
- Location
- Southern Trace Pro Plaza
- AKA
Hicks, Bryan C, MD
General Info
Bryan Hicks MD was born in Miami, FL in 1956. He is the oldest of four children. Growing up in South Miami and Coral Gables, he played golf and enjoyed Orange Bowl football games. His father John, also a dermatologist, enjoyed the profession and certainly influenced his son Bryan in that regard. Dr. Hicks’ mother Marilyn is from Vancouver. She contributed equanimity and resilient spirit to his upbringing. Dr. Hicks attended the University of Florida, where he graduated with a B.S. in zoology. Just as now, in those years, freshman's class sizes were large, distractions abundant and pre-med classes very competitive. Medical School at the University of Miami could not have been more different. The school was experimenting with pass-fail grades, and classes to encourage introspection in order to feed the planned expansion of family medicine with warm and fuzzy doctors. Jackson Memorial Hospital is the county hospital for Miami, Fl. That is where Dr. Hicks received his internal medicine internship and dermatology residency. The residency program at Miami was one of the largest in the country and very progressive in teaching skin cancer surgery as well as other cosmetic surgery. To this day, our instructors, Henry Menn, Harvey Blank, and Leonard Lewis are known as pioneers in the field of dermatology. Those were the years of 1982 to 1986, and HIV disease had just come to North America. Dr. Hicks helped Neil Penneys MD write the first photographic atlas on skin manifestations of AIDS. Those years prepared him to recognize and diagnose patients with other “new” diseases such as eosinophilia-myalgia syndrome from contaminated L-tryptophan and nephrogenic systemic fibrosis from gadolinium in dialysis. This ability to diagnose a new problem that one has briefly read about but never seen is a special and great endorsement of our American medical education system.