Dr. Donald Lee Granger MD
Infectious Disease Specialist | Infectious Disease
50 N Medical Dr Salt Lake City UT, 84132About
Dr. Donald Granger is an infectious disease specialist practicing in Salt Lake City, UT. Dr. Granger 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
University of Utah School of Medicine 1972
Provider Details
Expert Publications
Data provided by the National Library of Medicine- Low plasma arginine concentrations in children with cerebral malaria and decreased nitric oxide production.
- Major histocompatibility complex-dependent susceptibility to Cryptococcus neoformans in mice.
- Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium RamA, intracellular oxidative stress response, and bacterial virulence.
- Major histocompatibility complex controls the trajectory but not host-specific adaptation during virulence evolution of the pathogenic fungus Cryptococcus neoformans.
- Elevated plasma phenylalanine in severe malaria and implications for pathophysiology of neurological complications.
- Arginine, nitric oxide, carbon monoxide, and endothelial function in severe malaria.
- Plasma Plasmodium falciparum histidine-rich protein-2 concentrations are associated with malaria severity and mortality in Tanzanian children.
- Dimethylarginines: endogenous inhibitors of nitric oxide synthesis in children with falciparum malaria.
- Decreased endothelial nitric oxide bioavailability, impaired microvascular function, and increased tissue oxygen consumption in children with falciparum malaria.
- Quantification of Plasmodium falciparum histidine-rich protein-2 in cerebrospinal spinal fluid from cerebral malaria patients.
- Impaired systemic tetrahydrobiopterin bioavailability and increased oxidized biopterins in pediatric falciparum malaria: association with disease severity.
- Impaired systemic tetrahydrobiopterin bioavailability and increased dihydrobiopterin in adult falciparum malaria: association with disease severity, impaired microvascular function and increased endothelial activation.
- Monocyte polarization in children with falciparum malaria: relationship to nitric oxide insufficiency and disease severity.
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