ISSN: 2161-0681

Journal of Clinical & Experimental Pathology
Open Access

Our Group organises 3000+ Global Conferenceseries Events every year across USA, Europe & Asia with support from 1000 more scientific Societies and Publishes 700+ Open Access Journals which contains over 50000 eminent personalities, reputed scientists as editorial board members.

Open Access Journals gaining more Readers and Citations
700 Journals and 15,000,000 Readers Each Journal is getting 25,000+ Readers

This Readership is 10 times more when compared to other Subscription Journals (Source: Google Analytics)
Google Scholar citation report
Citations : 2975

Journal of Clinical & Experimental Pathology received 2975 citations as per Google Scholar report

Journal of Clinical & Experimental Pathology peer review process verified at publons
Indexed In
  • Index Copernicus
  • Google Scholar
  • Sherpa Romeo
  • Open J Gate
  • Genamics JournalSeek
  • JournalTOCs
  • Cosmos IF
  • Ulrich's Periodicals Directory
  • RefSeek
  • Directory of Research Journal Indexing (DRJI)
  • Hamdard University
  • EBSCO A-Z
  • OCLC- WorldCat
  • Publons
  • Geneva Foundation for Medical Education and Research
  • Euro Pub
  • ICMJE
  • world cat
  • journal seek genamics
  • j-gate
  • esji (eurasian scientific journal index)
Share This Page

Elke Pogge von Strandmann

Department of Internal Medicine I, University Clinic Cologne, Cologne, Germany

Biography

Elke Pogge von Strandmann is currently working as a Professor in the Department of Internal Medicine I, University Clinic Cologne, Cologne, Germany. The author's research interests include Clinical Pathology, Histopathology, Hemato Pathology, Surgical Pathology, Diagnosis. The author is serving as an editorial member and reviewer of several international reputed journals. The author has successfully completed his administrative responsibilities. The author has authorized many research articles/books related to Clinical Pathology, Experimental Pathology.

Publications

Targeting Functionality of Cancer Cell-Derived Extracellular Vesicles to Immune Cells of the Tumor Microenvironment

In most cases, cancer cells cannot proliferate alone. They receive support form stromal cells and recruit and reprogram non-malignant immune cells not to damage the cancer cells but to support the tumor growth. Classical Hodgkin lymphoma (cHL) is a good example, as its growth critically depends on tumor-supporting immune cells. The affected lymphoi... Read More»

Hinrich P Hansen, Katrin S Reiners and Elke Pogge von Strandmann

Commentary: J Clin Exp Pathol 2015, 5: 226

DOI: 10.4172/2161-0681.1000226

Abstract Peer-reviewed Full Article Peer-reviewed Article PDF Mobile Full Article

Top