Neelima Naga Manda, Hospitalist Medicare: May Accept Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1200 Old York Rd, Abington, PA 19001 Phone: 215-481-2606 |
Hamzah Alfahel, MD Hospitalist Medicare: Medicare Enrolled Practice Location: 1200 Old York Rd, Abington, PA 19001 Phone: 214-481-2000 |
Udaybhanu Veldanda, M.D. Hospitalist Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1200 Old York Rd, Abington, PA 19001 Phone: 215-481-2191 Fax: 215-481-4361 |
Baber Ghauri, MD Hospitalist Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: 1200 Old York Rd, Department Of Medicine Hospitalists, Abington, PA 19001 Phone: 215-481-2222 Fax: 888-525-2124 |
Muhammad Farooq, M.D. Hospitalist Medicare: Accepting Medicare Assignments Practice Location: Abington Memorial Hospital, Gme Office, 1200 Old York Road, Abington, PA 19001 Phone: 215-481-2606 Fax: 215-481-3485 |
News Archive
Researchers at INSERM (France) have engineered a chimeric protein that increases cell survival, migration and proliferation to improve stem cell engraftment. The results, which appear in the September 2009 issue of Experimental Biology and Medicine, show that TAT-Tpr-Met, a cell permeable form of the hepatocyte growth factor receptor can increase the number of hepatic stem cells integrated into the liver of the mouse.
Using a homemade, high-tech microscope, scientists at the University of Virginia School of Medicine have revealed how a cancer-causing virus anchors itself to our DNA. That discovery could pave the way for doctors to cure incurable diseases by flushing out viruses, including HPV and Epstein-Barr, that now permanently embed themselves in our cells.
Spanish researchers have developed a prototype of a vaccine against the AIDS-causing HIV virus that is "much more powerful" than those made to date.
SRU Biosystems today announced that Caliper Life Sciences will use SRU Biosystems' label-free BIND® technology to offer new functional assays as part of its Discovery Alliances and Services.
Scientists from the VIB-UGent Center for Inflammation Research identified the mechanisms by which the bacterial pathogen Clostridium difficile kills intestinal epithelial cells, thus destroying the protective mucosal barrier of the intestinal tract.
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