Dr. Jugenburg’s Undergraduate Degree
For Dr. Jugenburg’s complete Bio go to Plastica.ca
Dr. Jugenburg received his undergraduate degree from the University of Toronto in Molecular Biology and Molecular Genetics from the St. George Campus in 2001 after going through some of the most difficult and demanding classes and lab work the university had to offer. He took the hard road so to speak instead of trying easier courses to maintain a high GPA. Dr. Martin Jugenburg decided to study Molecular Biology and Molecular Genetics so he could be better prepared for his medical studies and he excelled at both.
Dr. Jugenburg loved to spend his spare time working on special research projects at a couple of different hospitals in the Toronto area such as The Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto, St. Michael’s Hospital and Toronto General Hospital. During his time at these hospitals, Dr. Jugenburg’s work led to a number of different publications from his peers which can still be found important today.
While Dr. Jugenburg was working under Dr. Kalman Kovacs, who is the world authority on the pituitary gland, Dr. Jugenburg was the first to exhibit the low vascularity of pituitary adenoma tumors and explain their low metastatic potential. His work led to a publication on the vasculature of pituitary tumors and angiogenesis. Under the tutelage of Dr. Ronald Zuker, Dr. Jugenburg worked with children suffering from facial paralysis. Dr. Jugenburg worked with a professional team of therapists and nurses to analyze the existing literature on facial reanimation in order to design tools to accurately measure Dr. Zuker’s facial reanimation surgeries impact on patients.




