Lauren Splittgerber, MD is a Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation physician specializing in Sports Medicine. She joined PCC in 2019 after completing a one-year fellowship in Sports Medicine at Shirley Ryan AbilityLab and Northwestern University, where she also completed her residency in Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation in 2018. Dr. Splittgerber received a Bachelor of Arts degree in Psychology from George Washington University in Washington, D.C. She completed medical school at the Medical College of Wisconsin in Milwaukee, WI in 2014. Dr. Splittgerber's recent publications include a review article on the significance of asymptomatic tendon pathology in athletes (Current Sports Medicine Reports, June 2019), as well as a textbook chapter published in a Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation textbook (Essentials of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, 4th ed, Editors Frontera WR, Silver JK, Rizzo Jr. TD; 2019). In her free time she enjoys running, hiking, tennis, and baking, and she also has an interest in art history.
Lauren Splittgerber, MD is a Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation physician specializing in Sports Medicine. She joined PCC in 2019 after completing a one-year fellowship in Sports Medicine at Shirley Ryan AbilityLab and Northwestern University, where she also completed her residency in Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation in 2018. Dr. Splittgerber received a Bachelor of Arts degree in Psychology from George Washington University in Washington, D.C. She completed medical school at the Medical College of Wisconsin in Milwaukee, WI in 2014. Dr. Splittgerber's recent publications include a review article on the significance of asymptomatic tendon pathology in athletes (Current Sports Medicine Reports, June 2019), as well as a textbook chapter published in a Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation textbook (Essentials of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, 4th ed, Editors Frontera WR, Silver JK, Rizzo Jr. TD; 2019). In her free time she enjoys running, hiking, tennis, and baking, and she also has an interest in art history.