About
Dr. Kenneth P. Stoller, MD,
I was an undergrad at UCLA where I was awarded a UC President’s Undergraduate Fellowship in the Health Sciences, I was publishing papers in the field of clinical pharmacology before entering medical school. I matriculated at Penn State Med School, and finished my post-graduate training at UCLA. I became the protégé of USC’s most renowned endocrinologist at the time and worked at the MRFIT project (Multi-Risk Factor Risk Intervention Trial) where I wrote the chapter, “Are we prepared to prevent Cancer” in the book Stress & Cancer (1981). At that same time, I was able to end Pound Seizure in the City of Los Angeles working with the Fund for Animals.
In 1989-90, the first child I had ever seen with autism walked into my waiting room but was only there to have his worms treated. I gave him the drug mebendazole and almost instantly he was making better eye contact, was more verbal and calmer. It was then that I realized autism was a treatable medical condition not the psychiatric condition I had been taught.
I had a very busy Lyme practice in the Bay Area where if I did not have 5 new confirmed cases of Lyme everyday it was a slow day.
I developed a genetic screen for increased adverse event risk from vaccinations, but was Galileo’ed for doing so. In early 2021, I published Gain of Function/Loss of Sanity and was advised to disappear, and for two years I did. Gender Affirming Sterilization – an American Cult was my first article when I reappeared. My publications are on ResearchGate.
Education & Training
- Undergraduate: University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA)
- Residency: UCLA (Graduated 1986)
- Board Certification: American Board of Pediatrics (active 1989-2011)
- American Board of Hyperbaric Medicine
- Lifetime Fellow, American College of Hyperbaric Medicine
Specialties & Achievements
- 20+ years treating brain-injured children and adults
- Pioneer in hyperbaric oxygen therapy for fetal alcohol syndrome, brain injuries in NFL players, veterans, and stroke patients
- Faculty member at the Medical Academy of Pediatric Special Needs
- Advocate for correct Lyme disease diagnosis and treatment