School of Medicine
Showing 5,051-5,060 of 5,090 Results
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Fanglin Zhang, MD., PhD.
Clinical Associate Professor, Adult Neurology
BioDr. Zhang is a Clinical Associate Professor of Neurology and Neurological Sciences at Stanford University, where she provides comprehensive inpatient and outpatient care for patients with complex neurological disorders. She is a board-certified neurologist and fellowship-trained clinical neurophysiologist. Dr. Zhang is committed to delivering patient-centered, evidence-based care and building strong partnerships with her patients to improve neurological health and quality of life. Her approach emphasizes collaboration, communication, and shared decision-making, ensuring that patients are actively engaged in their care.
As a dedicated clinician-educator, Dr. Zhang is passionate about mentoring the next generation of physicians. She serves as the Site Director for the Stanford Neurology Residency Program and the Neurohospitalist Fellowship Program at Stanford Health Care Tri-Valley, and as the Education Director of Stanford Health Care Tri-Valley Neurology. She is also deeply committed to community service and global health.
Dr. Zhang has published extensively in peer-reviewed journals and is committed to advancing innovative clinical research. Her current research focuses on leveraging artificial intelligence and clinical informatics to improve neurological disease prevention, optimize clinical decision-making, and enhance the delivery of neurological care. -
Hao Zhang
Clinical Assistant Professor, Radiation Oncology - Radiation Physics
Current Research and Scholarly InterestsFree-breathing gated CBCT acquisition on C-arm linear accelerator (LINAC) is time-consuming, typically requiring 2-8 min due to the repeated start-stop gantry motion synchronized with the respiratory gating signal. We propose a next-generation imaging paradigm, nonstop gated CBCT (ngCBCT), to substantially reduce acquisition time, lower imaging dose, and preserve image quality, thereby improving patient comfort and treatment accuracy.
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Huaiyu Zhang
Clinical Assistant Professor, Medicine - Cardiovascular Medicine
Clinical Assistant Professor (By courtesy), Psychiatry and Behavioral SciencesBioDr. Zhang obtained her MS in Neuroscience from the University of Southern California and earned her PhD in Clinical Psychology from Emory University. She completed both her predoctoral internship and postdoctoral fellowship at Emory University School of Medicine. Prior to joining Stanford in 2023, Dr. Zhang supported survivors of interpersonal violence at the University of California San Francisco Trauma Recovery Center for over seven years. Dr. Zhang embraces an integrative, contextualized, evidence-informed, and strength-based approach to teaching, supervision, and clinical care. She provides services in English and Mandarin.
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Ke-You (Yoyo) Zhang
Clinical Assistant Professor, Pediatrics - Gastroenterology
BioDr. Ke-You "Yoyo" Zhang is a board-certified pediatric transplant hepatologist and clinical assistant professor at Stanford University School of Medicine. She serves as Medical Director of both the Intestinal Transplant Program at Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital and the Vascularized Composite Tissue Transplant Program at Stanford Hospital. Dr. Zhang specializes in pediatric intestinal and liver transplantation, with research interests at the intersection of transplant immunology, stem cell therapeutics, and precision medicine.
A graduate of the University of Connecticut School of Medicine, Dr. Zhang completed her pediatrics residency and fellowships in pediatric gastroenterology and transplant hepatology at Stanford. She has authored numerous peer-reviewed publications on topics including pediatric liver and intestinal transplantation, acute rejection, and pancreatitis, and she is a frequent invited speaker at international conferences. Dr. Zhang also directs clinical trials advancing novel therapies for intestinal transplant patients and holds leadership roles in national transplant and hepatology societies.
Her work is recognized with the 2025 Early Career Clinical Excellence Award from Stanford's Department of Pediatrics. Dr. Zhang is deeply committed to improving outcomes and quality of life for children with complex gastrointestinal and liver diseases through innovative, multidisciplinary care. -
Niushen Zhang
Clinical Associate Professor, Adult Neurology
BioDr. Niushen Zhang is a board-certified neurologist and Chief of the Headache and Facial Pain Division in the Department of Neurology. She has a special interest in developing personalized treatment plans for headache patients which incorporate the use of complementary and integrative medicine. She is the Chair of the Complementary and Integrative Medicine Special Interest Section of the American Headache Society (AHS). Her research interests include the connection between the gut microbiome and migraine and the impact of diet and nutrition on migraine. In addition, she participates in clinical trials of new headache treatments for migraine and cluster headache. Dr. Zhang is also actively involved in medical education. She is the Director of the Headache Fellowship Program at Stanford. She serves as the Co-Chair of the Headache Fellowship Directors Committee for the American Headache Society (AHS). She is also a curriculum developer for AHS's REACH Program. She spearheaded the design and creation of the AHS National Headache Fellowship Opportunities website which serves as a central resource for all headache fellowship applicants and promotes the AAN's unified fellowship application timeline.
Dr. Zhang graduated from Yale University with a Bachelor of Science degree in Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology. She earned an MD from the New York University School of Medicine. She completed neurology residency and fellowship in headache and facial pain at Stanford University.