Dr. Andrew Matthew Scanameo, M.D. Internal Medicine - Geriatric Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 2565 Capital Medical Blvd, Tallahassee, FL 32308 Phone: 850-906-9369 Fax: 850-999-6563 |
Lisa Granville, MD Internal Medicine - Geriatric Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 4449 Meandering Way, Fsu Seniorhealth At Wok, Tallahassee, FL 32308 Phone: 850-645-1543 Fax: 850-645-0577 |
Dr. Nakeisha R Rodgers, MD Internal Medicine - Geriatric Medicine Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1300 Miccosukee Rd, Tallahassee, FL 32308 Phone: 850-431-7900 Fax: 850-431-7990 |
Niharika Naresh Suchak, MD Internal Medicine - Geriatric Medicine Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 4449 Meandering Way, Tallahassee, FL 32308 Phone: 850-644-2372 Fax: 850-645-2824 |
News Archive
In a Policy Forum published this week in PLoS Medicine, Simon Capewell and Hilary Graham review different population strategies for preventing cardiovascular disease and conclude that screening and treating high-risk individuals may be ineffective and widen social inequalities. The authors conclude "there is evidence that CVD prevention strategies for screening and treating high-risk individuals may represent a relatively ineffective approach that typically widens social inequalities.
A new report from cardiologists at UT Southwestern raises the hope that doctors will be able to visually check the jugular venous pressure of heart failure patients remotely, using the camera on a smartphone. The finding is especially timely as telemedicine expands during the pandemic.
A human protein associated with asthma is key to how hantaviruses infect the lungs and sometimes cause a life-threatening pulmonary condition known as hantavirus pulmonary syndrome, according to researchers supported by the National Institutes of Health.
The proteins CD47 and SIRPα are fundamental to establishing a correct number of immune cells, so-called B lymphocytes. This according to a dissertation by Shrikant Shanital Kolan from Umeå University in Sweden.
Not only does practice make perfect, it also makes for more efficient generation of neuronal activity in the primary motor cortex, the area of the brain that plans and executes movement, according to researchers from the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine.
› Verified 6 days ago