Simon G. Lewis is a neurologist based in Sydney, NSW, working from 75 Talavera Road, Sydney, NSW, Australia. Neurology can feel overwhelming at first. That is why his clinic takes a calm, step-by-step approach to care and decision making.
Simon looks after people dealing with movement and brain conditions, especially those that affect how someone moves, walks, or keeps their balance. This includes things like Parkinson’s disease and progressive movement disorders such as progressive supranuclear palsy, and atypical forms like progressive supranuclear palsy atypical.
He also sees patients with Lewy body dementia (LBD). Dementia is not just about memory. In many cases it can bring changes in thinking, attention, and day to day functioning, and it may include symptoms that come and go. Simon helps people understand what is happening and what options might help most.
Eye symptoms can be part of some neurological conditions too, and Simon treats issues such as Brown syndrome and problems linked with Charles Bonnet syndrome, where people can have visual experiences without a clear outside cause. He also works with conditions that affect eye movement and vision pathways, including supranuclear ophthalmoplegia.
For some patients, treatment needs more than tablets or therapy alone. Simon provides input on deep brain stimulation. This is a bigger step, so conversations tend to be thorough and practical, focused on what the process could mean day to day, and how care is followed up over time.
Over time, he builds a picture of how symptoms change, what triggers flare-ups, and what seems to help. In many cases that means coordinating care with other health professionals and keeping the plan realistic for life in the real world.
Simon’s work sits across several related conditions, including dementia, Parkinson’s disease, movement disorders, and the eye-related neurological conditions mentioned above. The goal is simple: give patients and families clear information, steady support, and a plan that fits their situation.