A case study, report, or other account of a case can be presented in a case report. Case Reports reveal important new information or cases that have taken a unique and notable path. Submissions may be based on a single case or a group of related cases. The most crucial component of the presentation is that it should offer a fresh viewpoint on a well-known clinical issue, or it could even represent a completely new clinical condition. The phenotype, presentation, research, and/or management of the case(s) could all be considered novel. Case Reports and clinical observations intends to serve as a road map for the haematology community's priority of research support. A case study, report, or other account of a case can be presented in a case report. Case Reports reveal important new information or cases that have taken a unique and notable path. The most crucial component of the presentation is that it should offer a fresh viewpoint on a well-known clinical issue, or it could even represent a completely new clinical condition. The phenotype, presentation, research, and/or management of the case(s) could all be considered novel. Hematology Case Reports and Reviews provides a vast scope for disseminating knowledge of blood and its illnesses to society, which might be useful information for haematologists all around the world.
Title : Cellular mechanisms involved in seronegative hemolysis
Donald R Branch, University of Toronto, Canada
Title : Immuno-Oncology (IO): 2023 and beyond
Stefan Gluck, Global Medical Affairs at Celgene Corporation, United States
Title : Managing bacterial eradication in disease and survival for life support systems on earth and space
A C Matin, Stanford Medical School, United States
Title : Hereditary hemolytic anemias due to red blood cell membranopathies rheological and genetic approach
Joan LLuis Vives Corrons, University of Barcelona, Spain
Title : The complete evidence that starling’s law responsible for many errors and misconceptions on fluid therapy in shock is wrong: The correct replacement is the hydrodynamic phenomenon of the porous orifice (G) tube
Ahmed N Ghanem, Mansoura University, Egypt
Title : Breaking Down Mental Health Stigmas
Thad Cummings, Thad Cummings, United States