Dr. Milton A Padgett, DO Emergency Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 165 Chestnut Dr Ste D, Madison, AL 35758 Phone: 256-325-7666 Fax: 256-325-7667 |
Dr. Ehtisham R. Khan, M.D. Emergency Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 8371 Highway 72 W, Suite 104, Madison, AL 35758 Phone: 256-265-5970 Fax: 256-817-5956 |
Aletha Lakay Edison, MD Emergency Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 7583 Wall Triana Hwy, Madison, AL 35757 Phone: 256-547-6119 Fax: 256-546-2981 |
Dr. Herbert C Frith Ii, M.D. Emergency Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 8375 Highway 72 W, Madison, AL 35758 Phone: 256-265-5051 |
Hannah Eason Bates, M.D Emergency Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 107 Waterford Cir, Madison, AL 35758 Phone: 256-517-3011 |
Derek Hunt, Emergency Medicine - Emergency Medical Services Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 709 Sugar Bend Cir Sw, Madison, AL 35756 Phone: 904-233-7038 |
Verne H Webster, M.D. Emergency Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 8045 Highway 72 W, Suite 100, Madison, AL 35758 Phone: 256-837-2271 Fax: 256-837-2910 |
News Archive
Using imaging mass spectrometry, researchers at the University of California, San Diego have developed tools that will enable scientists to visualize how different cell populations of cells communicate. Their study shows how bacteria talk to one another - an understanding that may lead to new therapeutic discoveries for diseases ranging from cancer to diabetes and allergies.
A pair of drugs that may be a one-two punch needed to help combat acute myeloid leukemia (AML), an aggressive blood cancer that kills nearly three-fourths of patients within five years of diagnosis, is the focus of a new multi-center clinical trial that will enroll patients at three sites across the U.S.
Johns Hopkins scientists have decoded for the first time the "stability blueprint" of an enzyme that resides in a cell's membrane, mapping which parts of the enzyme are important for its shape and function.
As we age, we tend to develop a number of chronic health conditions and concerns. Often, managing health problems can mean that older adults may take many different medications. When older adults take five or more medicines (a scenario health experts call "polypharmacy", it can increase the risk of harmful side effects.
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