The doctor who listens to what your cells are trying to tell you.
Diseases are treated where they show themselves, not where they began. My work begins inside the cell, where disease starts long before it has a name, and where the strategies that actually reach its root must begin too.
I am Dr. Server Bozdogan, physician, molecular biochemist and geneticist, author, and international speaker. A doctor who never stopped being a scientist, and a scientist who never stopped seeing the patient.
Three engagements that feed one another. What is discovered in the lab is tested in the clinic; what is seen in the clinic is taught to physicians worldwide; what physicians bring back shapes the next research question.
Research at the Advanced Calcium Research Institute, asking why illness keeps returning and what the body is actually doing at the cellular level.
Learn more →International congresses, advanced training for practitioners, and clear writing for patients, the science matters only when it reaches the people who need it.
Learn more →A deliberately small practice, a few private online consultations each month, each case read at the cellular and genetic level.
Learn more →A short look at where the work has been invited.


Most medical conditions are treated where they reveal themselves, not where they biologically took shape. The conversation here moves one layer deeper. To the cellular signaling and energy systems where the body decides what it can hold, what it can repair, and what it begins to lose.
A specialist second opinion at the cellular level, and at the genetic level.
A single clinical insight, distilled, for patients who want to understand what is happening inside, not just what to do about it.
Most fatigue does not begin in the blood. It begins in the mitochondria, the cellular machinery that produces nearly all of your energy. Standard panels do not measure that layer, which is why so many patients are told their results are normal while still feeling far from well.
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From a family medicine practice that began in 2002 to a PhD in Molecular Biochemistry and Genetics in 2023, and Research Director at ACRI since 2022.
His work sits at a junction clinicians rarely bridge: primary-care medicine, molecular biology, and the growing science of calcium as the body's most under-examined signal.
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