Jung J Noh, M.D. Allergy & Immunology Medicare: May Accept Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 2001 N Macarthur Blvd, Suite #340, Irving, TX 75061 Phone: 972-259-3511 |
Dr. Daniel Suez, MD Allergy & Immunology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1115 Kinwest Parkway, Suite 100, Irving, TX 75063 Phone: 972-401-0545 Fax: 214-496-9130 |
Alvin Joseph Aubry Jr., MD Allergy & Immunology Medicare: May Accept Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 4301 N Macarthur Blvd, Ste 203, Irving, TX 75038 Phone: 972-258-6535 Fax: 972-258-0467 |
Dr. Kameswari Surya Konduri, MD Allergy & Immunology - Allergy Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1115 Kinwest Pkwy, Suite 100, Irving, TX 75063 Phone: 972-401-0545 Fax: 972-401-0614 |
News Archive
A strategy that has been shown to reduce age-related health problems in several animal studies may also combat a major cause of age-associated infertility and birth defects.
More than 80% of hospitalized patients suffer more severe pain than necessary. This is the conclusion of Christoph Maier (Bochum University Hospital, Bochum, Germany) and his coauthors in their interim report of the Pain-Free Hospital Project ("Schmerzfreies Krankenhaus"), which appears in the current issue of Deutsches -rzteblatt International. The project, which was initiated in 2003, has the goal of improving pain management in hospitals across Germany.
Located in Building 100 at 455 Philip Blvd., the new medical office will become Kaiser Permanente's third location in Gwinnett County, along with its Sugar Hill-Buford and Gwinnett locations. The Lawrenceville location is the third new Kaiser Permanente medical center to open in the past six months, along with East Cobb and Downtown Decatur.
In one of the more unusual cases to confront the Colorado courts, the El Paso County Probate Court in Colorado Springs has granted Holme Roberts & Owen (HRO) client Alcor Life Extension Foundation of Scottsdale, Arizona, custody of the remains of Colorado Springs nurse Mary Robbins. The ruling upheld Ms. Robbins's 2006 agreement with Alcor to have her head cryonically preserved after death, hoping that future technologies could bring her back to life.
New findings suggesting that bacteria in the mouth and/or intestine can affect the the outcome pathogenesis of atherosclerosis and lead to new treatment strategies, reveals research from the University of Gothenburg, Sweden.
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