Daniel Noland, M.D. Medical Director of the Transfusion and Tissue Service at Children's Medical Center Clinical Associate Professor School Medical School Department Pathology You have reached the Academic Profile. For more information on the doctor and patient care, please visit the clinical profile. Biography Download Curriculum Vitae Dr. Daniel K. Noland is Chief of Service, Children's Plano Pathology and associate medical director of the Transfusion and Tissue Service at Children’s Health Dallas. He is an associate professor of pathology at UTSW. Dr. Noland obtained his BS in molecular biology in 1994 at Haverford College (Haverford, Pennsylvania). After finishing his MD at the University of North Carolina (Chapel Hill, North Carolina) in 1998, Dr. Noland completed a family practice internship at Riverside Family Practice (Newport News, Virginia). After switching specialties, Dr. Noland finished Pathology residency at the Medical College of Georgia (Augusta, Georgia) in 2007. In 2008 he completed a Transfusion Medicine Fellowship at Washington University in Saint Louis (Saint Louis, Missouri). Dr. Noland is the medical director of the Children’s Blood Bank (12,000 transfusions/year) and the associated apheresis service (400 therapeutic procedures/year). His research interests are clinical and translation applications of therapeutic apheresis and pediatric transfusion medicine. Dr. Noland has been appointed to the College of American Pathologist’s 2012 Transfusion Medicine Resource Committee. In 2019 he joined the Continuous Compliance Committee. His academic focus includes the education of medical students, pathology residents and fellows, and pediatric residents and fellows. Education Medical School University of North Carolina School of Medicine, Chapel Hill (1998) Internship Riverside Family Practice Residency (1999), Family Medicine Residency Riverside Family Practice Residency (2001), Family Medicine Residency Medical College of Georgia (2007), Pathology Fellowship Washington University in St. Louis School of Medicine (2008), Transfusion Medicine Research Interest Pediatric Transfusion Medicine Therapeutic Apheresis Publications Featured Publications Unusual Presentation of Anti-P1 Antibody in a Pediatric Patient Noland, DK, Zaloga, WF, and Cook, LO ASCP Checksample 4/2007 Transfusion-Transmitted Malaria: Two Pediatric Cases From the United States and Their Relevance in an Increasingly Globalized World. Stubbs LA, Price M, Noland D, Fuchs J, Filkins L, McElvania E, Luu HS, Sebert M, Waters A, Hsiang MS, J Pediatric Infect Dis Soc 2021 Sep Comparison of the platelet activation status of single-donor platelets obtained with two different cell separator technologies. Millar D, Hayes C, Jones J, Klapper E, Kniep JN, Luu HS, Noland DK, Petitti L, Poisson JL, Spaepen E, Ye Z, Maurer-Spurej E, Transfusion 2020 Sep 60 9 2067-2078 Massive transfusion in pediatric trauma: An ATOMAC perspective. Noland DK, Apelt N, Greenwell C, Tweed J, Notrica DM, Garcia NM, Todd Maxson R, Eubanks JW, Alder AC J. Pediatr. Surg. 2018 Oct Safety and efficacy of plasma exchange in pediatric transverse myelitis. Noland DK, Greenberg BM Neurol Clin Pract 2018 Aug 8 4 327-330 Intravenous methylprednisolone versus therapeutic plasma exchange for treatment of anti-n-methyl-d-aspartate receptor antibody encephalitis: A retrospective review. DeSena AD, Noland DK, Matevosyan K, King K, Phillips L, Qureshi SS, Greenberg BM, Graves D J Clin Apher 2015 Feb Results 1-6 of 6 1 Books Featured Books 17 Pediatric Transfusion Medicine. In Pediatric Laboratory Medicine. Jones PM, Dietzan DJ, et al. (2017). New York, McGraw Hill Education Professional Associations/Affiliations AABB (2007) American Society For Apheresis (2010) College of American Pathologists (2004)