Institution
Bryan D. Kraft, MD
Associate Professor of Medicine
- Email: kraft@wustl.edu
Dr. Bryan D. Kraft joined the Department of Medicine and Division of Pulmonology and Critical Care Medicine in September 2021. He is also the Director of the Medical Intensive Care Units (MICU) for ...
John Krais, PhD
Assistant Professor of Medicine
- Email: krais@wustl.edu
DNA damage response pathways are often altered in cancer and are attractive targets for therapeutic intervention, particularly in settings where chemotherapy resistance has emerged. My laboratory ...
Michael H. Kramer, MD, PhD
Instructor in Medicine
- Email: mhkramer@wustl.edu
Dr. Kramer is a physician-scientist studying blood cancers, particularly acute myeloid leukemia (AML). He has studied the proteomics of AML, identifying examples of posttranscriptionally regulated ...
Michael A. Kramer, MD, MS
Assistant Professor of Pediatrics
- Email: m.kramer@wustl.edu
Investigation of clinical interventions impacting the management and outcomes of critically ill children.
Jeffrey A. Krampf, MS, PhD
Lecturer
- Email: jkrampf@wustl.edu
Applying engineering approaches to biomedical problems. Focus on using computational fluid dynamics (CFD) to analyze flow behavior in arteriovenous fistula for end stage renal disease (ESRD) ...
Lindsay M. Kranker, MD
Assistant Professor of Surgery
- Email: kranker@wustl.edu
Social Determinants of Injury, Harm Reduction in Opioid Prescribing, Violence Intervention, Management of Traumatic/Burn Wounds, and Quality Improvement in Acute Care Surgery
Brian T. Kraus, MA, PhD
Postdoc Research Scholar
- Email: krausb@wustl.edu
Using precision neuroimaging combined with precision behavior to identify valid and reliable biomarkers of psychiatric illnesses in the brain.
Bridget G. Kraus, PhD, MOT, BHS, Other
Assistant Professor
- Email: comparatob@umsystem.edu
Dr. Kraus’s primary focus is on neurological recovery and enhancing health outcomes for individuals with acquired neurological conditions, such as spinal cord injury. The overarching goal is to ...
Alexxai Kravitz, PhD
- Email: alexxai@wustl.edu
Dr. Kravitz is interested in the study of basal ganglia circuits and how their function changes in disease states such as obesity, addiction, and anxiety disorders. Under normal conditions, the basal ...
Geraldine J. Kress, PhD
- Email: kress.g.j@wustl.edu
My research interests focus on understanding interactions between cognitive function and the circadian system during the aging process and Alzheimer’s disease (AD) progression in order to identify ...