Dr. Kathryn C Brown, M.D. Allergy & Immunology - Clinical & Laboratory Immunology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 9311 S Mingo Rd, Tulsa, OK 74133 Phone: 918-307-1613 Fax: 918-307-2454 |
Christopher Gurnee Gifford, MD Allergy & Immunology Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 6160 S Yale Ave, Tulsa, OK 74136 Phone: 918-495-2636 Fax: 918-495-2609 |
Suzanne Renee Olive, MD Allergy & Immunology - Allergy Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1725 E 19th St, Ste 200, Tulsa, OK 74104 Phone: 918-748-8381 Fax: 918-748-8397 |
Dr. David S Hurewitz, MD Allergy & Immunology - Allergy Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 9311 S Mingo Rd, Tulsa, OK 74133 Phone: 918-307-1613 Fax: 918-307-2454 |
Dr. Lynn Allan Wiens, MD Allergy & Immunology - Allergy Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 6160 S Yale Ave, Tulsa, OK 74136 Phone: 918-495-2636 Fax: 918-495-2609 |
News Archive
The song, "Get Happy," famously performed by Judy Garland, has encouraged people to improve their mood for decades. Recent research at the University of Missouri discovered that an individual can indeed successfully try to be happier, especially when cheery music aids the process.
Researchers at the Virginia Tech Carilion Research Institute have identified a naturally occurring molecule that has the potential for preserving sites of communication between nerves and muscles in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and over the course of aging - as well as a molecule that interferes with this helpful process.
A study published in the March 16 issue of Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) suggesting that a "daily-dose" of vitamin E (400 international units) among high-risk (chronically ill) cardiovascular patient populations is associated with a greater risk of heart failure is being challenged by leading health researchers around the country who claim the study lacks the adequate research and controlled sampling audience to justify this conclusion.
Researchers have been successful in creating sperm-producing germ cells from stem cells in a lab and transferred them into infertile mice, which after the treatment were able to produce healthy offspring. This new development could help thousands of infertile men become fathers if the method proves similarly effective in humans.
Genetic Immunity, a multi-national biopharmaceutical company developing nanomedicine vaccines today announces publication of the Company's innovative work to develop a stable liquid formulation to deliver a novel nanomedicine. Appearing in the International Journal of Pharmaceutics, the paper addresses how Genetic Immunity was able to overcome significant hurdles facing the field to successfully formulate the first topically administered nanomedicine therapeutic vaccine for the treatment of HIV/AIDS, DermaVir.
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