Dr. Ramesh C Gupta, M.D. Internal Medicine - Gastroenterology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 15-01 Broadway, Suite 28, Fair Lawn, NJ 07410 Phone: 201-794-8900 Fax: 201-794-9424 |
Dr. Donald Harold Kutner, DO Internal Medicine - Gastroenterology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 15-01 Broadway, Suite 34, Fair Lawn, NJ 07410 Phone: 201-794-6808 Fax: 201-797-6238 |
Youssef Botros, Internal Medicine - Gastroenterology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 22-02 Broadway Ste 301, Fair Lawn, NJ 07410 Phone: 201-414-5732 |
Dr. Jonathan Resnick, MD Internal Medicine - Gastroenterology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 31-00 Broadway, Fair Lawn, NJ 07410 Phone: 201-796-2255 Fax: 201-796-7020 |
Gary I Gorodokin, MD Internal Medicine - Gastroenterology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 24-07 A Broadway, Fair Lawn, NJ 07410 Phone: 201-791-7760 Fax: 201-791-7746 |
Jeffrey Lefkowitz, MD Internal Medicine - Gastroenterology Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 11-26 Saddle River Rd, Fair Lawn, NJ 07410 Phone: 201-796-9200 Fax: 201-796-7606 |
Kuchipudi Bapineedu, MD Internal Medicine - Gastroenterology Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 15-01 Broadway, Ste 22, Fair Lawn, NJ 07410 Phone: 201-796-4848 Fax: 201-797-7992 |
News Archive
The Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health announced on Tuesday the launch of "a groundbreaking new study called the Pneumonia Etiology Research for Child Health (PERCH) study … a large multi-country case-control study of severe pneumonia in hospitalized children under five years of age … being conducted in Bangladesh, The Gambia, Kenya, Mali, South Africa, Thailand, and Zambia," according to a JHSPH press release.
More forms of mercury can be converted to deadly methylmercury than previously thought, according to a study published Sunday in Nature Geoscience. The discovery provides scientists with another piece of the mercury puzzle, bringing them one step closer to understanding the challenges associated with mercury cleanup.
A multidisciplinary team at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) has developed carbon nanotubes that can be used as sensors for cancer drugs and other DNA-damaging agents inside living cells. The sensors, made of carbon nanotubes wrapped in DNA, can detect chemotherapy drugs such as cisplatin as well as environmental toxins and free radicals that damage DNA.
A first case of acute myelitis following infection with Zika virus has been reported for the first time by a research team from Inserm Unit 1127 Brain and Spinal Cord Institute (Inserm/CNRS/Sorbonne University) and neurologists at Pointe-à-Pitre University Hospital and the University of the Antilles.
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