Paul A Slota, M.D. Internal Medicine - Cardiovascular Disease Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1029 W Meeting St, Lancaster, SC 29720 Phone: 803-285-2041 Fax: 803-285-3852 |
Dr. Deepak Bhagwatial Shah, M.D. Internal Medicine - Cardiovascular Disease Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1029 W Meeting St, Lancaster, SC 29720 Phone: 803-285-2041 |
Carlos A Albrecht, M.D. Internal Medicine - Cardiovascular Disease Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 901 W Meeting St, Suite 205, Lancaster, SC 29720 Phone: 803-285-9700 Fax: 803-285-9898 |
Vipulkumar Bhogilal Shah, M.D. Internal Medicine - Cardiovascular Disease Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1029 W Meeting St, Lancaster, SC 29720 Phone: 803-285-2041 |
Dr. Mark Anthony Ciminelli, M.D., F.A.C.C. Internal Medicine - Cardiovascular Disease Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1029 W Meeting St, Lancaster, SC 29720 Phone: 803-285-2041 |
News Archive
A UCLA research team has shown that using a truncated form of the CD4 molecule as part of a gene therapy to combat HIV yielded superior and longer-lasting results in mouse models than previous similar therapies using the CD4 molecule.
What many Americans eat and how little they exercise could wind up costing them - and American taxpayers - some serious money. Moreover, the overweight and obese may lose months from their lifespans.
Results of a study by The Wistar Institute have described a correlation between a key melanoma signaling pathway and a novel class of drugs being tested in the clinic as adjuvant therapy for advanced melanoma, providing useful information for a more effective use of this type of treatment.
Researchers at The University of Texas at Austin have successfully stopped cocaine and alcohol addiction in experiments using a drug already approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to treat high blood pressure. If the treatment is proven effective in humans, it would be the first of its kind - one that could help prevent relapses by erasing the unconscious memories that underlie addiction.
Poor impulse control contributes to one's inability to control the consumption of rewarding substances, like food, alcohol, and other drugs. This can lead to the development of addiction. FDA-approved medications for alcoholism, like naltrexone (Revia) and disulfiram (Antabuse), are thought to reduce alcohol consumption by curbing cravings and creating unpleasant reactions to alcohol, effects which reduce the desire to drink alcohol.
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