Frank Dimitrios Vrionis, MD
Affiliations
Specialties
About Frank Dimitrios Vrionis, MD
Frank Vrionis, M.D., is a neurosurgeon and the chief of neurosurgery at Marcus Neuroscience Institute, a part of Baptist Health.
Dr. Vrionis specializes in treating brain, skull base and spine tumors. He has extensive experience in minimally invasive spine surgery, brain tumor surgery, skull base surgery, vascular neurosurgery and poliovirus treatment of brain tumors.
Prior to joining Marcus Neuroscience Institute in 2016, Dr. Vrionis spent 17 years at the H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center. Active in research, Dr. Vrionis described for the first time the presence of cancer stem cells in malignant brain tumors and established through a clinical trial the role of vertebroplasty for spine fractures in cancer patients. Dr. Vrionis serves as a professor of surgery at the Charles E. Schmidt College of Medicine at Florida Atlantic University.
Dr. Vrionis’ approach to patient care is to treat each patient with love and respect, as he would a member of his own family.
When he is not treating patients, he enjoys spending time in nature, farming, traveling, reading about philosophy and skiing.
Chief of Neurosurgery
Male
English
Greek
Adults (18+)
Adults (65+)
Bethesda Hospital
Boca Raton Regional Hospital
Education & Training
Tufts Medical Center
Residency Program, Neurological Surgery, 1997
University of Tennessee
Fellowship Program, Surgical Neurology, 1996
Tufts Medical Center
Internship Program, Surgery, General, 1991
University of Athens
Medical School, 1984
Neurological Surgery
American Board of Neurological Surgery, 2000
Locations
Accepted Insurance
- Medicare
- HMO
- POS
- PPO
- Great West
- HMO
- POS
- PPO
- BlueCare
- Medicare HMO
- MyBlue
- Options
- POS
- PPO
- Select
- Railroad
- HMO
- NHP
- POS
- PPO
Ratings & Reviews
The Patient Satisfaction Rating is an average of all responses to the care provider related questions shown below from our nationally-recognized Press Ganey Patient Satisfaction Survey. Patients that are treated in outpatient or hospital environments may receive different surveys, and the volume of responses will vary by question.