Dr. Kenneth Paul Stoller, MD Emergency Medicine - Undersea and Hyperbaric Medicine Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 330 Paseo Del Pueblo Sur Ste J, Taos, NM 87571 Phone: 505-288-9155 |
Michael J Howard, MD Emergency Medicine Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1397a Weimer Road, Taos, NM 87571 Phone: 505-758-8883 |
Per G Bjorkman, MD Emergency Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 1397 Weimer Road, Taos, NM 87571 Phone: 505-758-8833 Fax: 575-751-5718 |
Linda Carradine Lynch, MD Emergency Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1397 Weimer Rd, Taos, NM 87571 Phone: 505-758-8883 Fax: 505-751-5705 |
News Archive
Duke University physicists have developed a way to produce sharp fluid jets with enough precision that they can inject material into a single, living cell. The technique promises a way to deliver drugs to cells one at a time, which is likely to be very valuable for research involving stem cells and other cellular-level studies. The research appears in the current issue of the APS journal Physical Review Letters.
Since 2007, clinical trials using gene therapy have resulted in often-dramatic sight restoration for dozens of children and adults who were otherwise doomed to blindness. Now, researchers from the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania and The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, have found evidence that this sight restoration leads to strengthening of visual pathways in the brain, published this week in Science Translational Medicine.
Children are not at risk for more severe COVID-19 disease with Delta compared to earlier severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) variants, finds a new medRxiv* preprint study. In the first large-scale epidemiological study comparing SARS-CoV-2 infection between variants in children, researchers found children were more likely to be as sick from Delta as they would be if they were infected with the Alpha variant.
Robot-assisted surgery is now both more common and far more successful than radical "open" surgery to treat prostate cancer in the United States, according to a new Henry Ford Hospital study published in the current issue of the medical journal European Urology.
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