Susanna Mikayelyan: Hematology vs Oncology – Why They Often Go Together
Susanna Mikayelyan, Resident Physician at Yeolyan Hematology and Oncology Center, shared a post on LinkedIn:
“I’m glad I had the opportunity to write this article for Hemostasis Today and look forward to continued professional growth in both clinical care and academic research.”
Quoting Hemostasis Today’s post:
“Hematology vs Oncology: Why They Often Go Together

At first glance, hematology and oncology appear to occupy separate intellectual territories: one rooted in the physiology of blood and marrow, the other organized around solid tumors and organ-based disease.
This review smoothly sets up the “vs” while exploring the “together”, and briefly dives into the traditional scope, history, rationale, and overarching challenges”
Get the latest from Hemostasis Today.
-
Jul 7, 2026, 23:20Balaji Balagani: Exploring Pulmonary Embolism
-
Jul 7, 2026, 23:03Roxana González Mazarío: The Phenotype-Specific Cardiovascular Risks in AAV
-
Jul 7, 2026, 22:52Harry Spoelstra: LongC0VID Still has Zero Proven Treatments
-
Jul 7, 2026, 22:39Satya K. Morar: Acute Portal Vein Thrombosis as an Exceptionally Rare Complication of Liver Biopsy in CVID
-
Jul 7, 2026, 22:23Aravind Palraj: Antiphospholipid Syndrome is not Just ‘Start Warfarin and Follow INR’
-
Jul 7, 2026, 20:59William Aird: An Unlucky Turn Into the Renal Artery
-
Jul 7, 2026, 20:58Chokri Ben Lamine: The Two-Hit Model of TRALI
-
Jul 7, 2026, 20:57New Issue of Blood Out Now – Blood Journals Portfolio
-
Jul 7, 2026, 20:56Priyadarshini Ramakrishnan: Schistocytes – The Most “Misleading Heroes” in a Peripheral Smear