Zeshaan Maan
Stanford trained Plastic Surgeon and scientist studying the biology of scarring and regeneration.
Adam. You are everything.
Thank you to everyone at Kaiser Santa Clara for an amazing chief rotation! Wouldn’t have been the same without my amazing junior and was awesome to reconnect with our former co-resident and now faculty
Congratulations to for winning the Boyes Award at 🔥🔥🔥 💪🏽💪🏽💪🏽
has prepared me well for diaper changes - gather all your supplies before you start the procedure!
Amazing experience performing Scleroderma surgery under the operating microscope with - Chief of Plastic Surgery at Stanford, past President of the , and most importantly an outstanding mentor and teacher.
Joining the 2020 ASPS Fly-In as the Stanford Plastic Surgery and meeting Members of Congress was a fantastic experience and opportunity to participate in advocacy on behalf of our specialty and the patients we care for. @ United States Capitol
Old friends sharing in a new beginning.
Thank you to my residency family!! Can’t wait for you to all meet the little guy!
Got Milk?
And life will never be the same...
Repost from : “On the Cover!! Two of our residents, (Zeshaan Maan, MD MSc - PGY5) and (Clifford Sheckter, MD - PGY7) discuss the costs and benefits of taking time out of residency training to do research in the cover article of this quarter’s ASPS Plastic Surgery Resident magazine.
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Thrilled to have been invited by my colleague and good friend, Captain .dominikduscher to his European Plastic Surgery Research Council meeting. He did a tremendous job organizing a tour de force of plastic surgery research fused with an exciting and entertaining immersion in Bavarian culture. I was honored to chair a session alongside , hang out with my Tech Committee chair , meet the leaders of plastic surgery research in both the US and Europe, and reconnect with friends: . I was also fortunate to win one of the best talk awards! @ Munich, Germany
Always fun and educational to get hands on with maxillofacial surgery in SawBone Lab!
These 3D prints of CT Angiograms help translate what you see on the computer screen to what you will see when elevating a free flap. Great initiative by Dr Arash Momeni to help shift the microsurgery learning curve for residents!
Congratulations to our graduating chiefs: Brian Pridgen, Kristine Rustad, and Sarah Sorice!
Feeling great after annual Resident Appreciation Day! @ Stanford, California
When it’s over 100F outside and Stanford turns off the AC in your lab...
Whether it’s in the OR or the kitchen - Stanford Plastic Surgery is cookin!🔥🔥🔥 Dr Rohit Khosla, Dr Rod Hentz, Dr Subhro Sen, and Dr Catherine Curtin were showing us how it’s done!
If two heads are better than 1, then 4 heads are even better right? One of the best parts of working in Hagey is being surrounded by like minded people with diverse, complementary backgrounds willing to help each other out. When it comes to building a research it’s all about interlocking people. As Dr Longaker always says, “It takes a tribe!”
representing at hosted by
Snow Hike
It feels good when you get to the top...
Came across this view of from the side and felt my mood lighten and decided to share it.
Using a hypoxic cell culture chamber we are able to study angiogenesis, survival, and various other cellular responses to insufficient oxygen. This work is critical to understanding wound healing and the response to injury.
This article, “CRISPR/Cas9-Mediated BRCA1 Knockdown Adipose Stem Cells Promote Breast Cancer Progression,” shows the importance of the tumor microenvironment and how the BRCA1 mutation changes ASCs and their influence on breast cancer. Their findings may influence future therapeutic paradigms and reconstructive options for breast cancer.
Article is available at https://journals.lww.com/plasreconsurg/Fulltext/2019/03000/CRISPR_Cas9_Mediated_BRCA1_Knockdown_Adipose_Stem.17.aspx