Dr Nicholas Renwick is Section Lead for Anatomy and a Lecturer in Anatomical Sciences. He holds a BSc in Anatomy from the University of Bristol, an MSc in Physiotherapy from the University of Birmingham, and a PhD in Biomedical Sciences from the University of Leeds. He has over seven years’ experience teaching anatomy to medical and other healthcare students.
Dr Renwick has extensive experience delivering traditional lectures and practical teaching, including full-body cadaveric dissections, prosections, osteology, anatomical models, and digital learning resources. Alongside his academic work, he has practised clinically as a physiotherapist in London, Melbourne, and Sydney across a broad range of specialties, including musculoskeletal, sports, older adults, paediatrics, orthopaedics, intensive care, respiratory, oncology, and general medicine.
In his current role at City St George’s, Dr Renwick delivers lectures and practical sessions in musculoskeletal anatomy to medical, biomedical, and other healthcare students. He is the module lead for Clinically Applied Musculoskeletal Anatomy. His current research focuses on the application of augmented reality, artificial intelligence, and 3D printing in anatomy education. His previous research has examined the acute and chronic physiological responses to eccentric exercise in young and older adults, and the feasibility of eccentric exercise in exercise-intolerant clinical populations, including those with COPD and chronic heart failure.
PhD thesis, University of Leeds. Renwick, Nicholas Craig (2017). Eccentric stepping exercise: Acute and chronic physiological responses in young and older adults.
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