Dr. Jonathan R Diamond MD
Nephrologist (Kidney Specialist) | Nephrology
4700 Union Deposit Rd Suite 240 Harrisburg PA, 17111About
Dr. Jonathan Diamond is a nephrologist practicing in Harrisburg, PA. Dr. Diamond specializes in the care and treatment of the kidneys. As a nephrologist, Dr. Diamond most typically treats conditions like kidney stones, chronic kidney disease, acute renal failure, polycystuc kidney disease, high blood pressure and more. Nephrologists are also experts on kidney transplantation and dialysis. They are usually referred to by primary care physicians for problems related to the kidneys, and while they can perform tests to diagnose kidney disorders, they do not perform surgeries.
Education and Training
Suny-Hlth Sci Ctr At Syracuse, Coll of Med, Syracuse Ny 1979
Board Certification
Internal MedicineAmerican Board of Internal MedicineABIM- Nephrology
Provider Details
Expert Publications
Data provided by the National Library of Medicine- Chemokines and renal inflammation in proteinuric disorders: searching for the inciting stimulus.
- Long term improvement in dyslipidaemia in Type 2 diabetes with bezafibrate is not related to changes in insulin resistance.
- Obstructive nephropathy as a result of retroperitoneal fibrosis: a review of its pathogenesis and associations.
- Angiotensinogen and AT(1) antisense inhibition of osteopontin translation in rat proximal tubular cells.
- [Indications and contraindications for surgery in coronary insufficiency].
- Chemokine expression in the obstructed kidney.
- Increased renal expression of monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 and osteopontin in ADPKD in rats.
- Benign osteoblastoma of the talus: a review of the literature and report of a case.
- Progressive albuminuria and glomerulosclerosis in a rat model of chronic renal allograft rejection.
- Macrophages mediate adverse effects of cholesterol feeding in experimental nephrosis.
- The role of reactive oxygen species in animal models of glomerular disease.
- A putative role of hypercholesterolemia in progressive glomerular injury.
- Diabetic glomerulosclerosis and chronic renal failure with absent-to-minimal microalbuminuria.
- Chronic rejection--an undefined conundrum.
- Glomerular tumor necrosis factor and interleukin 1 during acute aminonucleoside nephrosis. An immunohistochemical study.
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