Hossain Mesbah, MD Family Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 450 E Sigler Ave, Memphis, MO 63555 Phone: 660-465-8513 Fax: 660-465-8525 |
Kelsey M Davis-humes, D.O Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 450 E Sigler Ave, Ste A, Memphis, MO 63555 Phone: 660-465-2828 Fax: 660-465-2956 |
Elliott L Hix Jr., DO Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: Rr 1 Box 53, Memphis, MO 63555 Phone: 660-465-8511 Fax: 660-465-2365 |
Jeffrey D Davis, DO Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: Rr 1 Box 55, Sigler Ave., Memphis, MO 63555 Phone: 660-465-7037 Fax: 660-465-7350 |
News Archive
CMS will not provide Medicare coverage for a genetic test that physicians can use to determine the proper dosage of the blood thinner drug warfarin, the New York Times reports.
EpiCept Corporation announced today that on February 11, 2010, the Board of Directors of EpiCept Corporation adopted an amendment to the company's Amended and Restated By-Laws to provide that a quorum for the transaction of business at any meeting of the stockholders of the Company shall consist of the holders of one third of the issued and outstanding shares of common stock of the Company.
Many amateur athletes have long suspected what research scientists for the Department of Preventative and Rehabilitative Sports Medicine of the Technische Universitaet Muenchen at Klinikum rechts der Isar have now made official: Documented proof, gathered during the world's largest study of marathons, "Be-MaGIC", that the consumption of non-alcoholic weissbier, or wheat beer, has a positive effect on athletes' health.
Volume 11, Issue 28 of Oncotarget features "Genetic analysis of the cooperative tumorigenic effects of targeted deletions of tumor suppressors Rb1, Trp53, Men1, and Pten in neuroendocrine tumors in mice" by Xu et, al. which reported that the authors examined whether the TSGs Rb1, Trp53, Pten, and Men1 have cooperative effects in suppressing neuroendocrine tumors in mice.
Going for a cosmetic surgery of the face may truly lead to a younger look according to researchers from the University of Toronto. Overall, patients looked an average of about 9 years younger than their chronological age after extensive facial surgery, in the opinion of raters who compared before-and-after pictures.
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