Penn Medicine Provider
Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Neurology
Nabela Enam, MD
4.9
(42)
Accepting new patients
Sees patients age 18 and up
Penn Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Rittenhouse
View 2 additional locations

About me

  • Assistant Professor of Clinical Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation

Education and training

  • Medical School: University of Maryland School of Medicine
  • Residency: Lankenau Hospital
  • Residency: Rutgers New Jersey Medical School
  • Residency: University of Pittsburgh Medical Center

What my patients think about me

Average Rating
4.9

42 reviews

Comments are submitted by patients and reflect their views and opinions. The comments are not endorsed by and do not necessarily reflect the views of Penn Medicine.

May 2025
5.0
5.0
i like how she communicate with me about my possibilities and give me a say in what happens with me.
May 2025
5.0
5.0
knowledgeable, understanding, kind
May 2025
4.0
4.0
very boxed in for a truly altruistic comprehension and knowledge of the patient, which would result with a personalized intention for the patient that could further benefit their human experience
May 2025
5.0
5.0
listened to me, i was so n agreement with what she was suggesting

Insurance accepted

My Locations

Penn Medicine hospital privileges

  • Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania: Has privileges to treat patients in the hospital.
  • Pennsylvania Hospital: Has privileges to treat patients in the hospital.
  • Penn Presbyterian Medical Center: Has privileges to treat patients in the hospital.
  • Penn Medicine Rittenhouse Long-Term Acute Care Hospital
Dr. Enam is a Penn Medicine physician.

Qualifications and experience

Treatments and Conditions

My research

Enam N, Deng H, Race NS, Majid DS, Okonkwo DO, Franzese KM. Continuum of care and longitudinal recovery in a 17-year-old athlete with second impact syndrome. , Brain Injury, 37(4): 2023,303-307


Harrell R, Manetta C, Guthrie M, Enam N. The Prevalence of Symptom Reporting for Benign Paroxysmal Positional Vertigo in a Traumatic Brain Injury Population. , Otol Neurotol., 44(2): 2023,172-176


Enam N., Race N. Pituitary Pitfalls: Guidance for Physiatric Diagnosis and Management of Post-TBI Hypopituitaris. , https://www.upmcphysicianresources.com/cme-courses/pituitary-pitfalls-guidance-for-physiatric-diagnosis-and-management-of-posttbi-hypopituitarism: 2023


Enam N, Chou K, Stubblefield MD. Prevalence of Function-Limiting Late Effects in Hodgkin Lymphoma Survivors. , PM R., 14(7): 2022,811-817


Enam N, Veerubhotla A, Ehrenberg N, Kirshblum S, Nolan KJ, Pilkar R. Augmented-Reality Guided Treadmill Training as a Modality to Improve Functional Mobility Post-Stroke: A Proof-of-Concept Case Series. , Top Stroke Rehabil., 28(8): 2021,624-630


Chowdhary K.,Enam N. Post-traumatic Headaches After Traumatic Brain Injury: Current Clinical Approaches. , Current Physical Medicine Rehabilitation Reports., 9: 2021,100-107


Bitterman J, Lew HL, Kirshblum S, Enam N, Pierce D, Ma RT. Design and Implementation of a Musculoskeletal Ultrasound Curriculum for Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Residents. , Am J Phys Med Rehabil., 99(12): 2020,1177-1183


Stubblefield, M., Enam, N., Chou, K. Radiation Fibrosis Syndrome. , Cancer Rehabilitation: a concise and portable pocket guide.: 2020


Enam, N., Shenoy, N. Common Anomalies. , McLean EMG Guide.: 2019,115-123


Enam N, Kakkad K, Amin A, Lever C. Management of hypertension in the hemodialysis population: a review of the literature. , J Community Hosp Intern Med Perspect., 4(3): 2014