Jigar D Patel, MD | |
4900 Houston Rd, Florence, KY 41042-4824 | |
(859) 301-8074 | |
(859) 301-4945 |
Full Name | Jigar D Patel |
---|---|
Gender | Male |
Speciality | Internal Medicine |
Experience | 16 Years |
Location | 4900 Houston Rd, Florence, Kentucky |
Accepts Medicare Assignments | Yes. He accepts the Medicare-approved amount; you will not be billed for any more than the Medicare deductible and coinsurance. |
Identifier | Type | State | Issuer |
---|---|---|---|
1497064323 | NPI | - | NPPES |
Taxonomy | Type | License (State) | Status |
---|---|---|---|
207R00000X | Internal Medicine | 58124 (Kentucky) | Primary |
207R00000X | Internal Medicine | 35.121355 (Ohio) | Secondary |
Facility Name | Location | Facility Type |
---|---|---|
St Elizabeth Edgewood | Edgewood, KY | Hospital |
St Elizabeth Florence | Florence, KY | Hospital |
St Elizabeth Ft Thomas | Fort thomas, KY | Hospital |
Group Practice Name | Group PECOS PAC ID | No. of Members |
---|---|---|
Summit Medical Group, Inc | 2163326240 | 693 |
News Archive
Washington State University researchers have found an unlikely recipe for antibiotic resistant bacteria: Mix cow dung and soil, and add urine infused with metabolized antibiotic. The urine will kill off normal E. coli in the dung-soil mixture. But antibiotic-resistant E. coli will survive in the soil to recolonize in a cow's gut through pasture, forage or bedding.
Falling asleep in your bed at night and being "put to sleep" under general anesthesia - as well as waking up in the morning or coming out of anesthesia - aren't quite the same thing, yet they share some important similarities. Max Kelz, MD, PhD, assistant professor of Anesthesiology and Critical Care at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, along with colleagues from Penn, UCSD, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, and Thomas Jefferson University, explored the distinctions between anesthetic unconsciousness and sleep by manipulating the genetic pathways known to be involved in natural sleep and studying the resulting effects on anesthetic states.
A protein that helps embryonic stem cells (ESCs) retain their identity also promotes DNA repair, according to a study in The Journal of Cell Biology. The findings raise the possibility that the protein, Sall4, performs a similar role in cancer cells, helping them fix DNA damage to survive chemotherapy.
The "omics" revolution of the last decade has ensured that the field of biomarker research will test the frontiers of biomedical research in the coming years. New biomarkers are discovered each day and this rapid development promises excellent growth potential for the biomarker analysis market. However, due to various challenges faced in biomarker validation and assay development, there is a huge lag between the time that a biomarker is discovered in the laboratory and the time it is actually commercialized.
› Verified 3 days ago
Entity Name | Summit Medical Group, Inc |
---|---|
Entity Type | Part B Supplier - Clinic/group Practice |
Entity Identifiers | NPI Number: 1881026169 PECOS PAC ID: 2163326240 Enrollment ID: O20031120000738 |
News Archive
Washington State University researchers have found an unlikely recipe for antibiotic resistant bacteria: Mix cow dung and soil, and add urine infused with metabolized antibiotic. The urine will kill off normal E. coli in the dung-soil mixture. But antibiotic-resistant E. coli will survive in the soil to recolonize in a cow's gut through pasture, forage or bedding.
Falling asleep in your bed at night and being "put to sleep" under general anesthesia - as well as waking up in the morning or coming out of anesthesia - aren't quite the same thing, yet they share some important similarities. Max Kelz, MD, PhD, assistant professor of Anesthesiology and Critical Care at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, along with colleagues from Penn, UCSD, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, and Thomas Jefferson University, explored the distinctions between anesthetic unconsciousness and sleep by manipulating the genetic pathways known to be involved in natural sleep and studying the resulting effects on anesthetic states.
A protein that helps embryonic stem cells (ESCs) retain their identity also promotes DNA repair, according to a study in The Journal of Cell Biology. The findings raise the possibility that the protein, Sall4, performs a similar role in cancer cells, helping them fix DNA damage to survive chemotherapy.
The "omics" revolution of the last decade has ensured that the field of biomarker research will test the frontiers of biomedical research in the coming years. New biomarkers are discovered each day and this rapid development promises excellent growth potential for the biomarker analysis market. However, due to various challenges faced in biomarker validation and assay development, there is a huge lag between the time that a biomarker is discovered in the laboratory and the time it is actually commercialized.
› Verified 3 days ago
Mailing Address | Practice Location Address |
---|---|
Jigar D Patel, MD Po Box 635283, Cincinnati, OH 45263-5283 Ph: (859) 344-5555 | Jigar D Patel, MD 4900 Houston Rd, Florence, KY 41042-4824 Ph: (859) 301-8074 |
News Archive
Washington State University researchers have found an unlikely recipe for antibiotic resistant bacteria: Mix cow dung and soil, and add urine infused with metabolized antibiotic. The urine will kill off normal E. coli in the dung-soil mixture. But antibiotic-resistant E. coli will survive in the soil to recolonize in a cow's gut through pasture, forage or bedding.
Falling asleep in your bed at night and being "put to sleep" under general anesthesia - as well as waking up in the morning or coming out of anesthesia - aren't quite the same thing, yet they share some important similarities. Max Kelz, MD, PhD, assistant professor of Anesthesiology and Critical Care at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, along with colleagues from Penn, UCSD, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, and Thomas Jefferson University, explored the distinctions between anesthetic unconsciousness and sleep by manipulating the genetic pathways known to be involved in natural sleep and studying the resulting effects on anesthetic states.
A protein that helps embryonic stem cells (ESCs) retain their identity also promotes DNA repair, according to a study in The Journal of Cell Biology. The findings raise the possibility that the protein, Sall4, performs a similar role in cancer cells, helping them fix DNA damage to survive chemotherapy.
The "omics" revolution of the last decade has ensured that the field of biomarker research will test the frontiers of biomedical research in the coming years. New biomarkers are discovered each day and this rapid development promises excellent growth potential for the biomarker analysis market. However, due to various challenges faced in biomarker validation and assay development, there is a huge lag between the time that a biomarker is discovered in the laboratory and the time it is actually commercialized.
› Verified 3 days ago
Karan Motiani, M.D. Internal Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 4900 Houston Rd, Florence, KY 41042 Phone: 859-301-8074 Fax: 859-301-4945 | |
Aishwarya Rushyal Shyamraj, M.D. Internal Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 4900 Houston Rd, Florence, KY 41042 Phone: 859-331-6466 Fax: 859-344-7930 | |
Barbara Marie Okafor, MD Internal Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 7370 Turfway Rd, Florence, KY 41042 Phone: 859-757-4446 Fax: 859-344-1999 | |
Patricia Miles, M.D. Internal Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 7388 Turfway Rd, Florence, KY 41042 Phone: 859-301-9140 Fax: 859-212-5124 | |
Dhanunjay Sarma Boyalakuntla, Internal Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 4900 Houston Rd, Florence, KY 41042 Phone: 859-301-8074 Fax: 859-301-4945 | |
Philip D Williams, M.D. Internal Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 4900 Houston Road, Florence, KY 41042 Phone: 859-331-6466 Fax: 859-344-7930 | |
Dr. Robert Jeron Strickmeyer, M.D. Internal Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 7388 Turfway Rd, Florence, KY 41042 Phone: 859-525-0005 Fax: 859-525-8806 |