Paul King Deranian, MD Internal Medicine - Critical Care Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 3 Alumni Dr Ste 301, Exeter, NH 03833 Phone: 603-775-0234 Fax: 603-772-1188 |
Richard D Hollister, MD Internal Medicine - Critical Care Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 3 Alumni Dr Ste 301, Exeter, NH 03833 Phone: 603-775-0234 Fax: 603-772-1188 |
John P Brennan, MD Internal Medicine - Critical Care Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 3 Alumni Dr Ste 301, Exeter, NH 03833 Phone: 603-775-0234 Fax: 603-772-1188 |
News Archive
Omega-3 claims are popping up in everything from cereal to mayonnaise, but are those foods the panacea that marketers would have you believe According to the cover story in the October issue of Nutrition Action Healthletter , certain omega-3s may reduce the risk of heart disease and might even help protect against cancer, Alzheimer's, and vision problems.
A new review finds similarities between the clinical presentation and course of breast cancer in Africans and African-Americans, suggesting that genetic factors may play a significant role in the racial differences encountered in the epidemiology of breast cancer in America.
At last, the pendulum has swung back to accepting breastfeeding as the norm in infant feeding. Interestingly, this has come about not because of recognition of its natural role in infant care, but because of the revelation of how much it costs the earth to produce "unnecessary formula" for babies and young children, according to a new study published in the British Medical Journal.
After 10 years of debate regarding the risks and benefits of hormone therapy, 15 top medical organizations have come together to issue a statement of agreement regarding the benefits of hormone therapy for symptomatic menopausal women. It was July 9, 2002, when the controversial, highly publicized Women's Health Initiative (WHI) published its assessment of hormone therapy for the prevention of chronic disease and concluded that risks exceeded benefits.
A team of Allegheny General Hospital (AGH) physicians led by neurosurgical pioneer Peter Jannetta, MD, has made an important new discovery linking the central nervous system to the onset and progression of type 2 diabetes mellitus.Reporting today in the journal Surgical Neurology International, Dr. Jannetta and his colleagues present evidence from a prospective clinical trial that vascular compression of a section of the brain called the medulla oblongata is a factor in some patients with type 2 diabetes and that microvascular decompression surgery (MVD) may be an effective treatment for the condition.
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