Adam Kunin, MD Internal Medicine - Cardiovascular Disease Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 528 Washington Hwy, Morrisville, VT 05661 Phone: 802-888-8338 Fax: 802-888-8203 |
Robert Kozub, M.D. Internal Medicine - Cardiovascular Disease Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 528 Washington Hwy, Morrisville, VT 05661 Phone: 800-789-2455 |
Dr. Henry Southall, M.D. Internal Medicine - Cardiovascular Disease Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 439 Washington Hwy, Morrisville, VT 05661 Phone: 802-888-5000 Fax: 802-888-5060 |
News Archive
The link between obesity and the risk of endometrial cancer has been well documented. A new study, however, shows that an even lower body mass index (BMI) than previously thought can signal an increased risk in Asian women with postmenopausal bleeding. Study results are published online today in Menopause, the journal of The North American Menopause Society (NAMS).
Alexion Pharmaceuticals, Inc. today announced new research evaluating the substantial disease burden of paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria, an ultra-rare blood disorder, in patients worldwide. The International PNH Registry, involving 580 patients from 99 sites in 14 countries as of May 2010, found that the debilitating symptoms and life-threatening complications of PNH are similar across patient populations around the world.
The experts who make recommendations for genetic disease screening in newborns face a challenging task: To make conclusions based on the most authoritative available evidence, while considering gaps in the research on such rare conditions, as well as their human impact. An overview of the steps followed by the expert panels tasked with making these recommendations is presented in a special section of the current issue of Genetics in Medicine, the official peer-reviewed journal of The American College of Medical Genetics.
A study led by a Johns Hopkins neurosurgeon has provided the first comprehensive map of a part of the adult human brain containing astrocytes, cells known to produce growth factors critical to the regeneration of damaged neural tissue and that potentially serve as brain stem cells.
University of California, Davis, researchers studying the 2009 H1N1 influenza virus, formerly referred to as "swine flu," have identified a group of immunologically important sites on the virus that are also present in seasonal flu viruses that have been circulating for years. These molecular sites appear to result in some level of immunity to the new virus in people who were exposed to the earlier influenza viruses.
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