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Dr mahouldra
Executive summary
The search term “dr mahouldra” did not match any clear individual in the provided results; available sources instead show several similarly spelled names (e.g., Maha Mohamed / Maha Abdalla Mohamed and multiple Malhotra variants) and general resources on medical credentials [1] [2] [3]. Available sources do not mention a person spelled “mahouldra” or a direct biographical match for that exact query.
1. Why your query returned mismatches — common name and spelling issues
Search results show multiple similar names (Maha Mohamed, Malhotra, Malhotra variants) and general credential guides, suggesting the query likely suffered from a spelling or transcription error; Stanford profiles list “Maha Abdalla Mohamed” as a nephrologist and faculty member, not “mahouldra” [1] [2]. Medical name-confusion is common: small spelling differences (Malhotra vs. Mohamed vs. Maha) can point to entirely different clinicians or non-clinical sites [1] [4].
2. The closest specific match found: Maha Abdalla Mohamed, MD
Stanford Health Care and Stanford Medicine host a profile for Maha Abdalla Mohamed, MD, a board‑certified, fellowship‑trained nephrologist in the Kidney and Pancreas Transplant Program who is a clinical associate professor in nephrology and researches transplant outcomes and infections such as BK virus and CMV [1] [2]. If you intended to find a transplant nephrologist with a first name like “Maha,” these pages are the authoritative institutional listings returned by your search [1] [2].
3. Other plausible near-matches in the results: Malhotra and similar names
Several search snippets reference “Malhotra” clinicians (e.g., Dr. Aseem Malhotra, cardiologist) and other Malhotra/Malhotra-like profiles; these are separate people in other specialties and geographies [4] [5]. If your intended person is spelled “Malhotra” rather than “Mahouldra,” verify the precise spelling and specialty to narrow results [4] [5].
4. On medical credential pages appearing in results — why they matter
Your results also include general guidance on medical credentials (MD, DO, board certification), which can be helpful for verifying clinicians’ qualifications: both M.D.s and D.O.s can become board certified after residency and examinations [3]. If you’re trying to confirm someone’s professional standing, institutional profiles (hospital or university pages) and credential guides are useful reference points [1] [3].
5. What the available sources do not say about “dr mahouldra”
Available sources do not mention anyone spelled exactly “mahouldra,” nor do they provide biographical data, publications, disciplinary records, or contact details for that exact name; therefore, I cannot assert whether such a person exists or provide verified details for them from these results (not found in current reporting).
6. Practical next steps to find the correct person
Check spelling (common variants: Maha, Mahoud, Malhotra, Mohamed), include a specialty (e.g., nephrology, cardiology) or institution (e.g., Stanford) in the search, and consult institutional directories or professional registries. Stanford’s profile pages are authoritative when you have the right name and show board certification and research interests for Maha Abdalla Mohamed [1] [2]. For general credential verification, use credentialing resources and physician finders such as Humana’s search or hospital/provider directories [3] [6].
7. Conflicting possibilities and how to resolve them
Results suggest at least two competing hypotheses: the user meant “Maha Mohamed” (a transplant nephrologist listed at Stanford) or a similarly named Malhotra clinician in another specialty. To resolve, provide any additional details you have (correct spelling, specialty, city, institution). Institutional profiles and credential pages in these results are reliable starting points for verification [1] [3] [2].
If you share more identifiers (correct spelling, field, or location), I will re-run a targeted check against the provided sources and summarize authoritative information.