Dr. Barbara L Mann-harbonic, MD Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 7173 Bernville Rd, Bernville, PA 19506 Phone: 610-488-6291 Fax: 610-488-0534 |
Dr. Thomas A Stewart, MD Family Medicine Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 7173 Bernville Rd, Bernville, PA 19506 Phone: 610-488-6291 Fax: 610-488-0534 |
Ross H Fichthorn, PA C Family Medicine Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 7173 Barnville Rd, Bernville, PA 19506 Phone: 610-488-6291 Fax: 610-488-0534 |
Edward Brian Petrasek, MD Family Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 7173 Bernville Rd, Bernville, PA 19506 Phone: 610-488-6291 Fax: 610-488-0534 |
Dr. Nathaniel Stephen Ohlinger, DO Family Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 44 East Ave Ste 3, Bernville, PA 19506 Phone: 610-488-7080 Fax: 610-488-9796 |
Dr. John Arthur Dicasimirro, M.D. Family Medicine - Sports Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 11 Orchard Pl, Bernville, PA 19506 Phone: 610-781-2964 Fax: 610-488-6377 |
News Archive
Biophysicists have discovered why the bacteria that cause tuberculosis (TB) are naturally somewhat resistant to antibiotics known as fluoroquinolones. Their findings, based on mapping the detailed three-dimensional structure of the drugs interacting with an essential enzyme in the TB germ, also reveal why some TB drugs are more potent than others and suggest how drug developers can make fluoroquinolones more efficacious against mutations that make the lung disease drug resistant.
The two top makers of the highly specialized swabs used to test patients for the novel coronavirus are straining to keep up with the demand, even as both the Italian and U.S. governments are working with them to increase production, including at a key manufacturing site in the midst of Italy's outbreak.
Researchers at the University of Missouri-Columbia recently created a model of proline dehydrogenase, an important cancer-preventing enzyme in the human body, and analyzed how it works.
A moderate aerobic exercise program, without weight loss, can improve insulin sensitivity in both lean and obese sedentary adolescents, according to a new study accepted for publication in The Endocrine Society's Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism (JCEM). Insulin is a hormone produced in the pancreas that permits glucose to enter cells to be used for energy or stored for future use by the body.
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