School of Medicine


Showing 1,141-1,160 of 13,052 Results

  • Karoline Marie Bornemann

    Karoline Marie Bornemann

    Postdoctoral Scholar, Cardiology

    BioKaroline-Marie Bornemann, PhD, is a biomedical engineer interested in cardiovascular flows, specifically the computational modeling of heart valves using fluid-structure interaction simulations. Her current postdoctoral research in the Marsden lab at Stanford University focuses on the simulation of congenital valve pathologies and valve repair in pediatrics working with Alexander D. Kaiser, Alison Marsden and Michael Ma. She obtained her PhD in Biomedical Engineering from the University of Bern where she investigated instability mechanisms leading to laminar-turbulent transition past bioprosthetic aortic valves with Dominik Obrist and Peter Schmid. During her PhD, she performed a secondment at KTH Royal Institute of Technology collaborating with Ardeshir Hanifi and Dan Henningson assessing the stability of flow fields past valve prostheses. Visualizations of her PhD research were showcased in a winning entry of the Gallery of Fluid Motion 2024 and her PhD thesis won the GCB Best PhD Thesis 2024 Award.

  • Mariya Borodyanskaya

    Mariya Borodyanskaya

    Clinical Assistant Professor, Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences

    BioDr. Mariya Borodyanskaya enjoys being part of the Stanford Team at Mills, an interdisciplinary team dedicated to supporting adolescents and their families in navigating the challenges of mental health crisis. She maintains a broad set of interests, including Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, Psychotic Disorders and Juvenile Justice system reform. She also enjoys supervising and teaching the Stanford Child & Adolescent Psychiatry fellows.

  • Amber Noelle Borucki

    Amber Noelle Borucki

    Clinical Associate Professor, Anesthesiology, Perioperative and Pain Medicine

    BioDr. Amber Borucki is an anesthesiologist and pain medicine specialist whose focus is chronic pain management in children and adolescents/young adults. She focuses on reducing or managing pain from chronic conditions in children or pain that occurs after surgery. Dr. Borucki completed her medical degree at Rush Medical College in Chicago, IL. She attended anesthesia residency at the University of Chicago. She completed a fellowship in pediatric anesthesiology at Boston Children's Hospital as well as a combined adult/pediatric pain medicine fellowship at Boston Children's Hospital, Brigham Women's Hospital, and Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center. Dr. Borucki worked for 5 years as a pediatric anesthesiologist and pain medicine specialist at UCSF Benioff Children's Hospital from 8/2017-5/2023. She was the Director of the Pediatric Anesthesia Service at UCSF during this time. Dr. Borucki transitioned to Stanford Medicine Children's Health in May 2023 and her clinical duties include working in the Emeryville satellite pediatric pain clinic, pediatric operating room, and pediatric pain inpatient service. Dr. Borucki is the Director for Pediatric Pain Education at Stanford, and has partnered with the Adult Pain Medicine program at Stanford to develop an exciting new pediatric pain fellowship track spanning Stanford Health Care and Stanford Medicine Children's Health. She will be the program director of of the pediatric component of this track.

    Notable accomplishments include developing and co-chairing the UCSF Benioff Transbay Pediatric Pain Management Committee, development of the pediatric establishment of an adolescent/young adult transitional pain clinic, and serving on the Bridge to One Bay project to standardize pain care across all UCSF Benioff Children's Hospital locations. Dr. Borucki also was instrumental in helping UCSF Benioff Children's Hospital obtain ChildKind designation, a prestigious designation for a hospital indicating that it prioritizes pediatric pain care. She also has been instrumental in the development of the new Pediatric Pain Medicine Fellowship Track at Stanford.

    Dr. Borucki has recently collaborated with Dr. Lauren Harrison of the Biobehavioral Pediatric Pain laboratory and together they were awarded a Pediatric Anesthesiology & Pain Medicine at Stanford School of Medicine Pilot Award to examine biopsychosocial demographic data around chronic pediatric back pain. Their study (PEDS-Back) is now enrolling patients through the pediatric pain medicine clinic.

    Dr. Borucki has been a member of the medical advisory council for the Make a Wish Bay Area chapter for almost 10 years. She is currently serving as the Secretary/Treasurer for the Society for Pediatric Pain Medicine (SPPM) and also served as the program director for the 12th annual SPPM meeting. Dr. Borucki has also served on several committees through the American Society of Anesthesiologists, California Society of Anesthesiologists, and Women Innovators in Pain Medicine national society. Dr. Borucki served as an editorial board member for Paediatric and Neonatal Pain.

  • Rupan Bose, MD, MB

    Rupan Bose, MD, MB

    Clinical Assistant Professor, Medicine - Cardiovascular Medicine

    BioRupan Bose, MD, MB, is a Cardiologist and Clinical Assistant Professor in the Division of Cardiovascular Medicine at Stanford University. He specializes in Preventive Cardiology, with a particular focus on high-risk populations. His mission is to identify the underlying drivers of cardiovascular risk, and his clinic is focused on taking a data-driven approach to addressing each of those individual risk factors. He is also deeply involved in the intersection of medicine and technology, with a particular focus on leveraging emerging technologies and innovations to improve cardiovascular disease monitoring and outcomes.

    Dr. Bose is a local Bay Area native. He completed his Medical Degree from the Keck School of Medicine of USC. He then completed his Residency in Internal Medicine at USC, followed by his Fellowship in Cardiovascular Medicine at Harbor-UCLA. With his interest in medicine and technology, he holds a Masters in Biotechnology (MB) with an emphasis on Bioinformatics from the University of Pennsylvania.

    At Stanford, Dr. Bose serves in the Preventive Cardiology clinic and also the Stanford South Asian Translational Heart Initiative (SSATHI) clinic. He also serves as the Medical Director for the Inpatient Cardiology Services and the Medical Director of the Inpatient Cardiology (J7) Unit. Additionally, he serves on the Cardiology Consult service and Inpatient Cardiology service, where he supervises and teaches Fellows, Residents, and Medical Students from the Stanford University School of Medicine.

  • Crystal M. Botham, Ph.D.

    Crystal M. Botham, Ph.D.

    Director of Grant Writing Academy & Office of Research Development, Pediatrics

    Current Role at Stanford• Providing individualized grantsmanship assistance to postdoctoral fellows and faculty
    • Editing and critically evaluating grant applications to improve funding potential
    • Interpreting sponsor requirements and providing strategic advice
    • Identifying a diverse portfolio of funding opportunities
    • Designing and facilitating courses to enable postdoctoral fellows to develop competitive Career Development applications
    • Developing and presenting at workshops on grant writing and proposal submission
    • Coordinating completion of subcontracts and large collaborative projects

  • Nawal Maria Boukli

    Nawal Maria Boukli

    Affiliate, Neurosurgery

    BioDr. Nawal Boukli’s research focuses on understanding how cells transition from adaptive to maladaptive stress responses, with a central emphasis on endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress, unfolded protein response (UPR) signaling, and GRP78 as a master regulator of cell fate and survival. Her work has defined critical mechanistic links between GRP78-driven stress adaptation, metabolic reprogramming, and therapeutic resistance in glioblastoma (GBM), while advancing GRP78 as a translational therapeutic target through antibody-based anti-GRP78 strategies designed to disrupt tumor survival pathways.
    Her broader research program integrates molecular biology, quantitative multi-omics, cancer biology, and NeuroHIV to uncover stress-driven mechanisms underlying disease progression. In parallel, her NeuroHIV studies investigate how HIV-1 gp120 induces maladaptive ER stress responses that alter astrocyte–neuron communication, promote synaptic vulnerability, and contribute to neurodegenerative processes. Collectively, her work bridges cancer and neurodegeneration through a unifying framework centered on proteostasis disruption and chronic stress signaling.
    In her project at Stanford University, awarded by The NIH Brain Initiative, Dr. Boukli is extending her research program using advanced spatial omics and neurobiology approaches to define astrocyte-specific ER stress domains and map how gp120-driven stress signaling becomes spatially organized within intact neural systems. This work aims to identify spatially resolved therapeutic targets and advance high-impact translational neuroscience studies.
    Dr. Boukli is also recognized for her innovative teaching, scientific leadership, and commitment to mentorship. She has mentored more than 32 master’s students, 8 Ph.D. students, and numerous undergraduate trainees, while developing student-centered scientific training and mentoring initiatives. Following her election to the Association of Biomolecular Resource Facilities Executive Board in 2019, she launched the organization’s first annual speed-mentoring initiative in 2020. She additionally serves as a reviewer for the National Institutes of Health Center for Scientific Review, including study sections focused on cancer therapeutics and biomarker development.
    Selected Peer-Reviewed Publications:
    https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/?term=nawal+boukli&sort=pubdate