Dr. Robert D Lewis, MD Internal Medicine - Hematology & Oncology Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 176-60 Union Tpke, Ste. 360, Fresh Meadows, NY 11366 Phone: 718-460-2300 Fax: 718-746-3495 |
Avram L. Abramowitz, M.D. Internal Medicine - Hematology & Oncology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 176 60 Union Tpke, Suite 360, Fresh Meadows, NY 11366 Phone: 718-460-2300 Fax: 718-460-9697 |
Dr. Abhisek Swaika, MBBS Internal Medicine - Hematology & Oncology Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 17660 Union Tpke Ste 360, Fresh Meadows, NY 11366 Phone: 718-460-2300 Fax: 347-225-9930 |
News Archive
Bypass patients who are older, female and/or from lower-income neighbourhoods are more likely to face delays in beginning cardiac rehabilitation (CR), making them less likely to complete CR, which can lead to a higher mortality risk, suggests a new study.
Researchers at Brigham and Women's Hospital and Massachusetts General Hospital have found an association between lower weight and more extensive deposits of the Alzheimer's-associated protein beta-amyloid in the brains of cognitively normal older individuals.
Some mouse sperm can discriminate between its brethren and competing sperm from other males, clustering with its closest relatives to swim faster in the race to the egg. But this sort of cooperation appears to be present only in certain promiscuous species, where it affords an individual's sperm a competitive advantage over that of other males.
The reason why we sleep remains an unresolved question of the 21st century. Research by Sara Marie Ulv Larsen, Sebastian Camillo Holst and colleagues from the Neurobiology Research Unit at the University Hospital Copenhagen, published this week in the open access journal PLoS Biology, now shows that the depth of non-rapid-eye-movement (nonREM) sleep in humans is associated with different genetic versions of a gene that encodes a water channel involved in fluid flow in the brain.
As survival rates among some patients with cancer continue to rise, so does the spread of these cancers to the brain - as much as 40 percent of all diagnosed brain cancers are considered metastatic, having spread from a primary cancer elsewhere in the body.
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