Dr. Andrew D Badley M.D.
Infectious Disease Specialist | Infectious Disease
200 1st St SW Rochester MN, 55905About
Dr. Andrew Badley is an infectious disease specialist practicing in Rochester, MN. Dr. Badley specializes in infections that are difficult to diagnose or unresponsive to treatments, such as HIV or airborne infections from a foreign country. Infectious disease specialists usually work with conditions that are not treatable by a primary physician but it is important to keep contact with the primary physician in order to receive information about the patients history and for deciding which diagnostic tests are appropriate.
Education and Training
Dalhousie University Faculty of Medicine 1990
Board Certification
Internal MedicineAmerican Board of Internal MedicineABIM- Infectious Disease
Internal MedicineAmerican Board of Internal MedicineABIM
Provider Details
Expert Publications
Data provided by the National Library of Medicine- Decreased HIV-associated T cell apoptosis by HIV protease inhibitors.
- Flow cytometric measurement of telomere length.
- Effect of cessation of highly active antiretroviral therapy during a discordant response: implications for scheduled therapeutic interruptions.
- Antiapoptotic mechanism of HIV protease inhibitors: preventing mitochondrial transmembrane potential loss.
- Comparative CD4 T-cell responses of reverse transcriptase inhibitor therapy with or without nelfinavir matched for viral exposure.
- Induction of cell death in human immunodeficiency virus-infected macrophages and resting memory CD4 T cells by TRAIL/Apo2l.
- Influence of mitochondrial control of apoptosis on the pathogenesis,
- Normalization of natural killer cell function and phenotype with effective anti-HIV therapy and the role of IL-10.
- Modulation of apoptosis by HIV protease inhibitors.
- Selection of lymphocyte gating protocol has an impact on the level of reliability of T-cell subsets in aging specimens.
- Induction of apoptosis by a nonnucleoside human immunodeficiency virus type 1 reverse transcriptase inhibitor.
- HIV-1 protease processes procaspase 8 to cause mitochondrial release of cytochrome c, caspase cleavage and nuclear fragmentation.
- Vpr R77Q is associated with long-term nonprogressive HIV infection and impaired induction of apoptosis.
- Attenuated T-lymphocyte response to HIV therapy in individuals receiving HMG-CoA
- Mitochondrion-mediated apoptosis in HIV-1 infection.
Professional Memberships
- Member Minnesota Medical Association/Zumbro Valley
Experience & Accolades
- Member2010Directors Recombinant DNA Advisory Committee, National Institutes of Health
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