Dr. Reena Khetpal, Hospitalist Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1500 Matthews Township Pkwy, Matthews, NC 28105 Phone: 704-384-9740 Fax: 704-384-9565 |
Naveen Bandarupalli, MD Hospitalist Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1500 Matthews Township Pkwy, Matthews, NC 28105 Phone: 704-384-5416 Fax: 704-384-5992 |
Dr. Amine Segueni, MD Hospitalist Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 630 Matthews Township Pkwy, Matthews, NC 28105 Phone: 704-495-6020 |
Dr. Akshay Pendyal, M.D. Hospitalist Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1401 Matthews Township Pkwy Ste 212, Matthews, NC 28105 Phone: 704-316-3131 Fax: 704-316-3132 |
Eva Agocs, M.D. Hospitalist Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1500 Matthews Township Pkwy, Matthews, NC 28105 Phone: 704-384-5416 Fax: 704-384-5992 |
Dr. Vijay Kumar Talreja, Hospitalist Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1500 Matthews Township Pkwy, Matthews, NC 28105 Phone: 704-384-9740 Fax: 704-384-9565 |
News Archive
Childhood obesity rates have nearly tripled in the previous 30 years and researchers are asking the important question of how this epidemic will impact the future health of these obese children and public health in general. A University of Colorado Cancer Center article recently published in the journal Gerontology shows that even in cases in which obese children later lose weight, the health effects of childhood obesity may be long-lasting and profound.
Using the same strain of yeast that ferments wine and makes dough rise, a team led by University of California, Irvine and Harvard Medical School researchers has developed an in vitro technology that can rapidly hypermutate antibodies.
The biologist Armelle Corpet and paleo-climatologist Anna Nele Meckler will receive the 2015 Marie Heim-Vögtlin (MHV) Prize. This distinction rewards their remarkable scientific work supported by a MHV grant. The prize will be bestowed on 23 September 2015 at the Swiss National Science Foundation.
Boston University researchers have learned new information about the consequences of overeating high-calorie foods. Not only does this lead to an increase in white fat cell production, the type prominent in obesity, but it also leads to the dysfunction of brown fat cells, the unique type of fat that generates heat and burns energy.
On March 24, Nancy Muller, executive director of The National Association For Continence (NAFC), spoke to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), in support of a Premarket Approval Application (PMAA) of Uromedica, Inc.'s Adjustable Continence Therapy (ACT®) device to approve its usage in the U.S. The ACT is designed to treat female stress urinary incontinence (SUI).
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