School of Medicine
Showing 931-938 of 938 Results
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Raquel Leanne Lyn
Clinical Assistant Professor, Medicine - Pulmonary, Allergy & Critical Care Medicine
BioDr. Lyn serves as a Clinical Assistant Professor within the Division of Pulmonary, Allergy, and Critical Care at Stanford University. Specializing in the comprehensive management of pulmonary hypertension, she completed her fellowship in pulmonary and critical care medicine at Stanford in 2021. She furthered her expertise as the 2021-22 Vera Moulton Wall Center eBay Fellow in Pulmonary Vascular Disease.
Today, Dr. Lyn is a member of the Stanford Health Care Adult Pulmonary Hypertension team, serving as a clinician educator and Assistant Director of the Stanford CTEPH program. Her clinical and research interests focus on CTEPH, post-acute PE care and advancing health equity within pulmonary vascular diseases. -
David Lyons
Professor (Research) of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences (General Psychiatry and Psychology-Adult), Emeritus
Current Research and Scholarly InterestsBehavioral neuroscience
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Zhonglin Lyu
Instructor, Neurosurgery
BioDr. Lyu is an instructor at the Department of Neurosurgery, Stanford University School of Medicine. He obtained his PhD at Soochow University, China, where he gained training in designing biomaterials to modulate stem cell behaviors and led multidisciplinary research under the advice of Prof. Hong Chen. During his PhD, he worked as a visiting student researcher at Canary Center for Early Cancer Detection at Stanford University School of Medicine where he gained training in microfluidics and cancer metastasis. Dr. Lyu carried out his postdoctoral research under the guidance of Prof. Jon Park and Wonjae Lee at the Department of Neurosurgery, Stanford University School of Medicine. He developed an in vitro microphysiological model of ischaemic stroke and used it as a platform to systematically evaluate the restorative potential of stem cell therapy.
As an instructor, Dr. Lyu's main research interest is to develop in vitro tissue/organ models to mimic human diseases including neurological diseases and cancer metastases. The goal is to use these models to understand disease mechanisms, to evaluate the safety and efficacy of existing drugs, and to look for new therapeutic targets.