Tyler C. Cymet, D.O. (born 1963 Smithtown, New York) is a physician in Baltimore, Maryland. He attended medical school at Nova Southeastern University, served as an intern at Chicago Osteopathic Medical Center, and performed a Primary Care Internal Medicine residency at Yale University and did additional training at Sinai Hospital of Baltimore.
He has done extensive research in musculoskeletal medicine focusing on fibromyalgia, and the structure of the musculoskeletal system and how it effects function. He proposed an explanation for the articular crack (knuckle, neck and other joint noises) that has caused debate in the medical community. Dr. Cymet's research has shown a protective joint effect from joint cracking.
He is the author of the Ad Diction Ary, a guide to the slang of the drug subculture written for the medical community to help physicians better comprehend drug addicted patients.
Dr. Cymet has written medical articles on issues of public interest in medicine including why people develop gray hair, what are hiccups and why do they happen. Other areas that he has done research in include good and bad effects of exercise, the role of probiotics in medicine, carbohydrates, and obesity.
As of 2006 he is an assistant professor at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and former President of the Baltimore City Medical Society and Maryland Association of Osteopathic Physicians. Dr. Cymet has also taught at the Kirksville College of Osteopathic Medicine and the Kansas City University of Medicine and Biosciences.
He is notable in the medical community for his treatment of anthrax victims during the 2001 anthrax attacks in the Baltimore-Washington Metropolitan Area of the United States. This led to many policy changes in how victims of disasters are triaged and treated. In 2006 he discovered a new syndrome called Erondu-Cymet Syndrome.
He has also volunteered for humanitarian missions to Guatemala and Haiti with DOCARE. In 2006 he ran for Maryland Democratic Central Committee, 11th legislative district. He is currently the Legislative Director for Health Care Policy for Delegate Dan K. Morhaim in the Maryland Legislature.