James Lawrence Stafford M.D.
Cardiologist | Interventional Cardiology
22 S Greene St Baltimore MD, 21201About
Dr. James Stafford is a cardiologist practicing in Baltimore, MD. Dr. Stafford specializes in diagnosing, monitoring, and treating diseases or conditions of the heart and blood vessels and the cardiovascular system. These conditions include heart attacks, heart murmurs, coronary heart disease, and hypertension. Dr. Stafford also practices preventative medicine, helping patients maintain a heart-healthy life.
Education and Training
Georgetown Univ Sch of Med, Washington Dc 1979
Board Certification
Internal MedicineAmerican Board of Internal MedicineABIM- Cardiovascular Disease
Provider Details
Expert Publications
Data provided by the National Library of Medicine- Induction of nitric oxide and respiratory burst response in activated goldfish macrophages requires potassium channel activity.
- Unstable angina in a patient with a single sequential saphenous vein bypass graft supplying the entire coronary circulation.
- Assessment of contemporary stent deployment using intravascular ultrasound.
- Macrophage-mediated innate host defense against protozoan parasites.
- Transferrin and the innate immune response of fish: identification of a novel mechanism of macrophage activation.
- Plasma membrane depolarization reduces nitric oxide (NO) production in P388D.1
- A toll-like receptor (TLR) gene that is up-regulated in activated goldfish
- Recombinant transferrin induces nitric oxide response in goldfish and murine macrophages.
- Animal models for the study of innate immunity: protozoan infections in fish.
- A novel soluble form of the CSF-1 receptor inhibits proliferation of self-renewing macrophages of goldfish (Carassius auratus L.).
- Channel catfish, Ictalurus punctatus, CD4-like molecules.
- A novel family of diversified immunoregulatory receptors in teleosts is homologous to both mammalian Fc receptors and molecules encoded within the leukocyte receptor complex.
- Identification and characterization of a FcR homolog in an ectothermic vertebrate, the channel catfish (Ictalurus punctatus).
- Channel catfish leukocyte immune-type receptors contain a putative MHC class I binding site.
- B cell receptor accessory molecules in the channel catfish, Ictalurus punctatus.
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